Replicability of proton MR spectroscopic imaging findings in mild traumatic brain injury: Implications for clinical applications

•Replication of diffuse WM injury.•Replication of diffuse WM injury correlations with clinical outcome.•Nature of injury not replicated (high Cho and Cr vs originally reported low NAA).•High sensitivity of MRS approach may be more important than choice of WM region. Proton magnetic resonance spectro...

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Veröffentlicht in:NeuroImage clinical 2023-01, Vol.37, p.103325-103325, Article 103325
Hauptverfasser: Chen, Anna M., Gerhalter, Teresa, Dehkharghani, Seena, Peralta, Rosemary, Gajdošík, Mia, Gajdošík, Martin, Tordjman, Mickael, Zabludovsky, Julia, Sheriff, Sulaiman, Ahn, Sinyeob, Babb, James S., Bushnik, Tamara, Zarate, Alejandro, Silver, Jonathan M., Im, Brian S., Wall, Stephen P., Madelin, Guillaume, Kirov, Ivan I.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Replication of diffuse WM injury.•Replication of diffuse WM injury correlations with clinical outcome.•Nature of injury not replicated (high Cho and Cr vs originally reported low NAA).•High sensitivity of MRS approach may be more important than choice of WM region. Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H MRS) offers biomarkers of metabolic damage after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI), but a lack of replicability studies hampers clinical translation. In a conceptual replication study design, the results reported in four previous publications were used as the hypotheses (H1-H7), specifically: abnormalities in patients are diffuse (H1), confined to white matter (WM) (H2), comprise low N-acetyl-aspartate (NAA) levels and normal choline (Cho), creatine (Cr) and myo-inositol (mI) (H3), and correlate with clinical outcome (H4); additionally, a lack of findings in regional subcortical WM (H5) and deep gray matter (GM) structures (H6), except for higher mI in patients’ putamen (H7). 26 mTBI patients (20 female, age 36.5 ± 12.5 [mean ± standard deviation] years), within two months from injury and 21 age-, sex-, and education-matched healthy controls were scanned at 3 Tesla with 3D echo-planar spectroscopic imaging. To test H1-H3, global analysis using linear regression was used to obtain metabolite levels of GM and WM in each brain lobe. For H4, patients were stratified into non-recovered and recovered subgroups using the Glasgow Outcome Scale Extended. To test H5-H7, regional analysis using spectral averaging estimated metabolite levels in four GM and six WM structures segmented from T1-weighted MRI. The Mann-Whitney U test and weighted least squares analysis of covariance were used to examine mean group differences in metabolite levels between all patients and all controls (H1-H3, H5-H7), and between recovered and non-recovered patients and their respectively matched controls (H4). Replicability was defined as the support or failure to support the null hypotheses in accordance with the content of H1-H7, and was further evaluated using percent differences, coefficients of variation, and effect size (Cohen’s d). Patients’ occipital lobe WM Cho and Cr levels were 6.0% and 4.6% higher than controls’, respectively (Cho, d = 0.37, p = 0.04; Cr, d = 0.63, p = 0.03). The same findings, i.e., higher patients’ occipital lobe WM Cho and Cr (both p = 0.01), but with larger percent differences (Cho, 8.6%; Cr, 6.3%) and effect sizes (Cho, d = 0.52; Cr, d = 0.88) were fou
ISSN:2213-1582
2213-1582
DOI:10.1016/j.nicl.2023.103325