Quantitative Imaging Biomarkers of Damage to Critical Memory Regions Are Associated With Post–Radiation Therapy Memory Performance in Brain Tumor Patients
We used quantitative magnetic resonance imaging to prospectively analyze the association between microstructural damage to memory-associated structures within the medial temporal lobe and longitudinal memory performance after brain radiation therapy (RT). Patients with a primary brain tumor receivin...
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Veröffentlicht in: | International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics biology, physics, 2019-11, Vol.105 (4), p.773-783 |
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Zusammenfassung: | We used quantitative magnetic resonance imaging to prospectively analyze the association between microstructural damage to memory-associated structures within the medial temporal lobe and longitudinal memory performance after brain radiation therapy (RT).
Patients with a primary brain tumor receiving fractionated brain RT were enrolled on a prospective trial (n = 27). Patients underwent high-resolution volumetric brain magnetic resonance imaging, diffusion-weighted imaging, and neurocognitive testing before and 3, 6, and 12 months post-RT. Medial temporal lobe regions (hippocampus; entorhinal, parahippocampal, and temporal pole white matter [WM]) were autosegmented, quantifying volume and diffusion biomarkers of WM integrity (mean diffusivity [MD]; fractional anisotropy [FA]). Reliable change indices measured changes in verbal (Hopkins Verbal Learning Test-Revised) and visuospatial (Brief Visuospatial Memory Test-Revised [BVMT-R]) memory. Linear mixed-effects models assessed longitudinal associations between imaging parameters and memory.
Visuospatial memory significantly declined at 6 months post-RT (mean reliable change indices, –1.3; P = .012). Concurrent chemotherapy and seizures trended toward a significant association with greater decline in visuospatial memory (P = .053 and P = .054, respectively). Higher mean dose to the left temporal pole WM was significantly associated with decreased FA (r = –0.667; P = .002). Over all time points, smaller right hippocampal volume (P = .021), lower right entorhinal FA (P = .023), greater right entorhinal MD (P = .047), and greater temporal pole MD (BVMT-R total recall, P = .003; BVMT-R delayed recall, P = .042) were associated with worse visuospatial memory. The interaction between right entorhinal MD (BVMT-R total recall, P = .021; BVMT-R delayed recall, P = .004) and temporal pole FA (BVMT-R delayed recall, P = .024) significantly predicted visuospatial memory performance.
Brain tumor patients exhibited visuospatial memory decline post-RT. Microstructural damage to critical memory regions, including the hippocampus and medial temporal lobe WM, were associated with post-RT memory decline. The integrity of medial temporal lobe structures is critical to memory performance post-RT, representing possible avoidance targets for memory preservation. |
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ISSN: | 0360-3016 1879-355X 1879-355X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.ijrobp.2019.08.003 |