White Matter Abnormalities Track Disease Progression in Multiple System Atrophy

Author:

Raghavan Sheelakumari1,Lesnick Timothy G.2,Castillo Anna M.2,Reid Robert I.3,Fought Angela J.2,Thostenson Kaely B.1,Johnson Sparrman Kohl L.1,Gehrking Tonette L.4,Gehrking Jade A.4,Sletten David M.4,Low Phillip A.4,Singer Wolfgang4ORCID,Vemuri Prashanthi1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Radiology Mayo Clinic Rochester MN USA

2. Department of Quantitative Health Sciences Mayo Clinic Rochester MN USA

3. Department of Information Technology Mayo Clinic Rochester MN USA

4. Department of Neurology Mayo Clinic Rochester MN USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundWhite matter (WM) abnormalities have been implicated in clinically relevant functional decline in multiple system atrophy (MSA).ObjectiveTo identify the WM and gray matter (GM) abnormalities in MSA and assess the utility of longitudinal structural and diffusion changes as surrogate markers for tracking disease progression in MSA.MethodsTwenty‐seven participants with early MSA [15 with clinically predominant cerebellar (MSA‐C) and 12 with clinically predominant parkinsonian features (MSA‐P)] and 14 controls were enrolled as a part of our prospective, longitudinal study of synucleinopathies. Using structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and diffusion MRI (diffusion tensor and neurite orientation and dispersion density imaging), we analyzed whole and regional brain changes in these participants. We also evaluated temporal imaging trajectories based on up to three annual follow‐up scans and assessed the impact of baseline diagnosis on these imaging biomarkers using mixed‐effect models.ResultsMSA patients exhibited more widespread WM changes than GM, particularly in the cerebellum and brainstem, with greater severity in MSA‐C. Structural and diffusion measures in the cerebellum WM and brainstem deteriorated with disease progression. Rates of progression of these abnormalities were similar in both MSA subtypes, reflecting increasing overlap of clinical features over time.ConclusionWM abnormalities are core features of MSA disease progression and advance at similar rates in clinical MSA subtypes. Multimodal MRI imaging reveals novel insights into the distribution and pattern of brain abnormalities and their progression in MSA. Selected structural and diffusion measures may be useful for tracking disease progression in MSA clinical trials.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Food and Drug Administration

Publisher

Wiley

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