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Periventricular gradient of T(1) tissue alterations in multiple sclerosis

OBJECTIVE: Pathology in multiple sclerosis is not homogenously distributed. Recently, it has been shown that structures adjacent to CSF are more severely affected. A gradient of brain tissue involvement was shown with more severe pathology in periventricular areas and in proximity to brain surfaces...

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Autores principales: Vaneckova, Manuela, Piredda, Gian Franco, Andelova, Michaela, Krasensky, Jan, Uher, Tomas, Srpova, Barbora, Havrdova, Eva Kubala, Vodehnalova, Karolina, Horakova, Dana, Hilbert, Tom, Maréchal, Bénédicte, Fartaria, Mário João, Ravano, Veronica, Kober, Tobias
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9112026/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35561554
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2022.103009
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author Vaneckova, Manuela
Piredda, Gian Franco
Andelova, Michaela
Krasensky, Jan
Uher, Tomas
Srpova, Barbora
Havrdova, Eva Kubala
Vodehnalova, Karolina
Horakova, Dana
Hilbert, Tom
Maréchal, Bénédicte
Fartaria, Mário João
Ravano, Veronica
Kober, Tobias
author_facet Vaneckova, Manuela
Piredda, Gian Franco
Andelova, Michaela
Krasensky, Jan
Uher, Tomas
Srpova, Barbora
Havrdova, Eva Kubala
Vodehnalova, Karolina
Horakova, Dana
Hilbert, Tom
Maréchal, Bénédicte
Fartaria, Mário João
Ravano, Veronica
Kober, Tobias
author_sort Vaneckova, Manuela
collection PubMed
description OBJECTIVE: Pathology in multiple sclerosis is not homogenously distributed. Recently, it has been shown that structures adjacent to CSF are more severely affected. A gradient of brain tissue involvement was shown with more severe pathology in periventricular areas and in proximity to brain surfaces such as the subarachnoid spaces and ependyma, and hence termed the “surface–in” gradient. Here, we study whether (i) the surface-in gradient of periventricular tissue alteration measured by T(1) relaxometry is already present in early multiple sclerosis patients, (ii) how it differs between early and progressive multiple sclerosis patients, and (iii) whether the gradient-derived metrics in normal-appearing white matter and lesions correlate better with physical disability than conventional MRI-based metrics. METHODS: Forty-seven patients with early multiple sclerosis, 52 with progressive multiple sclerosis, and 92 healthy controls were included in the study. Isotropic 3D T(1) relaxometry maps were obtained using the Magnetization-Prepared 2 Rapid Acquisition Gradient Echoes sequence at 3 T. After spatially normalizing the T(1) maps into a study-specific common space, T(1) inter-subject variability within the healthy cohort was modelled voxel-wise, yielding a normative T(1) atlas. Individual comparisons of each multiple sclerosis patient against the atlas were performed by computing z-scores. Equidistant bands of voxels were defined around the ventricles in the supratentorial white matter; the z-scores in these bands were analysed and compared between the early and progressive multiple sclerosis cohorts. Correlations between both conventional and z-score-gradient-derived MRI metrics and the Expanded Disability Status Scale were assessed. RESULTS: Patients with early and progressive multiple sclerosis demonstrated a periventricular gradient of T(1) relaxation time z-scores. In progressive multiple sclerosis, z-score-derived metrics reflecting the gradient of tissue abnormality in normal-appearing white matter were more strongly correlated with disability (maximal rho = 0.374) than the conventional lesion volume and count (maximal rho = 0.189 and 0.21 respectively). In early multiple sclerosis, the gradient of normal-appearing white matter volume with z-scores > 2 at baseline correlated with clinical disability assessed at two years follow-up. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that the surface-in white matter gradient of tissue alteration is detectable with T1 relaxometry and is already present at clinical disease onset. The periventricular gradients correlate with clinical disability. The periventricular gradient in normal-appearing white matter may thus qualify as a promising biomarker for monitoring of disease activity from an early stage in all phenotypes of multiple sclerosis.
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spelling pubmed-91120262022-05-18 Periventricular gradient of T(1) tissue alterations in multiple sclerosis Vaneckova, Manuela Piredda, Gian Franco Andelova, Michaela Krasensky, Jan Uher, Tomas Srpova, Barbora Havrdova, Eva Kubala Vodehnalova, Karolina Horakova, Dana Hilbert, Tom Maréchal, Bénédicte Fartaria, Mário João Ravano, Veronica Kober, Tobias Neuroimage Clin Regular Article OBJECTIVE: Pathology in multiple sclerosis is not homogenously distributed. Recently, it has been shown that structures adjacent to CSF are more severely affected. A gradient of brain tissue involvement was shown with more severe pathology in periventricular areas and in proximity to brain surfaces such as the subarachnoid spaces and ependyma, and hence termed the “surface–in” gradient. Here, we study whether (i) the surface-in gradient of periventricular tissue alteration measured by T(1) relaxometry is already present in early multiple sclerosis patients, (ii) how it differs between early and progressive multiple sclerosis patients, and (iii) whether the gradient-derived metrics in normal-appearing white matter and lesions correlate better with physical disability than conventional MRI-based metrics. METHODS: Forty-seven patients with early multiple sclerosis, 52 with progressive multiple sclerosis, and 92 healthy controls were included in the study. Isotropic 3D T(1) relaxometry maps were obtained using the Magnetization-Prepared 2 Rapid Acquisition Gradient Echoes sequence at 3 T. After spatially normalizing the T(1) maps into a study-specific common space, T(1) inter-subject variability within the healthy cohort was modelled voxel-wise, yielding a normative T(1) atlas. Individual comparisons of each multiple sclerosis patient against the atlas were performed by computing z-scores. Equidistant bands of voxels were defined around the ventricles in the supratentorial white matter; the z-scores in these bands were analysed and compared between the early and progressive multiple sclerosis cohorts. Correlations between both conventional and z-score-gradient-derived MRI metrics and the Expanded Disability Status Scale were assessed. RESULTS: Patients with early and progressive multiple sclerosis demonstrated a periventricular gradient of T(1) relaxation time z-scores. In progressive multiple sclerosis, z-score-derived metrics reflecting the gradient of tissue abnormality in normal-appearing white matter were more strongly correlated with disability (maximal rho = 0.374) than the conventional lesion volume and count (maximal rho = 0.189 and 0.21 respectively). In early multiple sclerosis, the gradient of normal-appearing white matter volume with z-scores > 2 at baseline correlated with clinical disability assessed at two years follow-up. CONCLUSION: Our results suggest that the surface-in white matter gradient of tissue alteration is detectable with T1 relaxometry and is already present at clinical disease onset. The periventricular gradients correlate with clinical disability. The periventricular gradient in normal-appearing white matter may thus qualify as a promising biomarker for monitoring of disease activity from an early stage in all phenotypes of multiple sclerosis. Elsevier 2022-04-16 /pmc/articles/PMC9112026/ /pubmed/35561554 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2022.103009 Text en © 2022 The Author(s) https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Regular Article
Vaneckova, Manuela
Piredda, Gian Franco
Andelova, Michaela
Krasensky, Jan
Uher, Tomas
Srpova, Barbora
Havrdova, Eva Kubala
Vodehnalova, Karolina
Horakova, Dana
Hilbert, Tom
Maréchal, Bénédicte
Fartaria, Mário João
Ravano, Veronica
Kober, Tobias
Periventricular gradient of T(1) tissue alterations in multiple sclerosis
title Periventricular gradient of T(1) tissue alterations in multiple sclerosis
title_full Periventricular gradient of T(1) tissue alterations in multiple sclerosis
title_fullStr Periventricular gradient of T(1) tissue alterations in multiple sclerosis
title_full_unstemmed Periventricular gradient of T(1) tissue alterations in multiple sclerosis
title_short Periventricular gradient of T(1) tissue alterations in multiple sclerosis
title_sort periventricular gradient of t(1) tissue alterations in multiple sclerosis
topic Regular Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9112026/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35561554
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2022.103009
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