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Exploring the reproducibility of functional connectivity alterations in Parkinson’s disease

Since anatomic MRI is presently not able to directly discern neuronal loss in Parkinson’s Disease (PD), studying the associated functional connectivity (FC) changes seems a promising approach toward developing non-invasive and non-radioactive neuroimaging markers for this disease. While several grou...

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Autores principales: Badea, Liviu, Onu, Mihaela, Wu, Tao, Roceanu, Adina, Bajenaru, Ovidiu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5705108/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29182621
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0188196
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author Badea, Liviu
Onu, Mihaela
Wu, Tao
Roceanu, Adina
Bajenaru, Ovidiu
author_facet Badea, Liviu
Onu, Mihaela
Wu, Tao
Roceanu, Adina
Bajenaru, Ovidiu
author_sort Badea, Liviu
collection PubMed
description Since anatomic MRI is presently not able to directly discern neuronal loss in Parkinson’s Disease (PD), studying the associated functional connectivity (FC) changes seems a promising approach toward developing non-invasive and non-radioactive neuroimaging markers for this disease. While several groups have reported such FC changes in PD, there are also significant discrepancies between studies. Investigating the reproducibility of PD-related FC changes on independent datasets is therefore of crucial importance. We acquired resting-state fMRI scans for 43 subjects (27 patients and 16 normal controls, with 2 replicate scans per subject) and compared the observed FC changes with those obtained in two independent datasets, one made available by the PPMI consortium (91 patients, 18 controls) and a second one by the group of Tao Wu (20 patients, 20 controls). Unfortunately, PD-related functional connectivity changes turned out to be non-reproducible across datasets. This could be due to disease heterogeneity, but also to technical differences. To distinguish between the two, we devised a method to directly check for disease heterogeneity using random splits of a single dataset. Since we still observe non-reproducibility in a large fraction of random splits of the same dataset, we conclude that functional heterogeneity may be a dominating factor behind the lack of reproducibility of FC alterations in different rs-fMRI studies of PD. While global PD-related functional connectivity changes were non-reproducible across datasets, we identified a few individual brain region pairs with marginally consistent FC changes across all three datasets. However, training classifiers on each one of the three datasets to discriminate PD scans from controls produced only low accuracies on the remaining two test datasets. Moreover, classifiers trained and tested on random splits of the same dataset (which are technically homogeneous) also had low test accuracies, directly substantiating disease heterogeneity.
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spelling pubmed-57051082017-12-08 Exploring the reproducibility of functional connectivity alterations in Parkinson’s disease Badea, Liviu Onu, Mihaela Wu, Tao Roceanu, Adina Bajenaru, Ovidiu PLoS One Research Article Since anatomic MRI is presently not able to directly discern neuronal loss in Parkinson’s Disease (PD), studying the associated functional connectivity (FC) changes seems a promising approach toward developing non-invasive and non-radioactive neuroimaging markers for this disease. While several groups have reported such FC changes in PD, there are also significant discrepancies between studies. Investigating the reproducibility of PD-related FC changes on independent datasets is therefore of crucial importance. We acquired resting-state fMRI scans for 43 subjects (27 patients and 16 normal controls, with 2 replicate scans per subject) and compared the observed FC changes with those obtained in two independent datasets, one made available by the PPMI consortium (91 patients, 18 controls) and a second one by the group of Tao Wu (20 patients, 20 controls). Unfortunately, PD-related functional connectivity changes turned out to be non-reproducible across datasets. This could be due to disease heterogeneity, but also to technical differences. To distinguish between the two, we devised a method to directly check for disease heterogeneity using random splits of a single dataset. Since we still observe non-reproducibility in a large fraction of random splits of the same dataset, we conclude that functional heterogeneity may be a dominating factor behind the lack of reproducibility of FC alterations in different rs-fMRI studies of PD. While global PD-related functional connectivity changes were non-reproducible across datasets, we identified a few individual brain region pairs with marginally consistent FC changes across all three datasets. However, training classifiers on each one of the three datasets to discriminate PD scans from controls produced only low accuracies on the remaining two test datasets. Moreover, classifiers trained and tested on random splits of the same dataset (which are technically homogeneous) also had low test accuracies, directly substantiating disease heterogeneity. Public Library of Science 2017-11-28 /pmc/articles/PMC5705108/ /pubmed/29182621 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0188196 Text en © 2017 Badea et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Badea, Liviu
Onu, Mihaela
Wu, Tao
Roceanu, Adina
Bajenaru, Ovidiu
Exploring the reproducibility of functional connectivity alterations in Parkinson’s disease
title Exploring the reproducibility of functional connectivity alterations in Parkinson’s disease
title_full Exploring the reproducibility of functional connectivity alterations in Parkinson’s disease
title_fullStr Exploring the reproducibility of functional connectivity alterations in Parkinson’s disease
title_full_unstemmed Exploring the reproducibility of functional connectivity alterations in Parkinson’s disease
title_short Exploring the reproducibility of functional connectivity alterations in Parkinson’s disease
title_sort exploring the reproducibility of functional connectivity alterations in parkinson’s disease
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5705108/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/29182621
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0188196
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