One-year changes in brain microstructure differentiate preclinical Huntington's disease stages

•Differences in preHD in one-year MD change in posterior basal ganglia and CC splenium.•Non-monotonic effect driven by MD decrease in FAR group and increase in MID/NEAR.•Only 1 clinical measure shows difference in 1y change between preclinical stages.•Diffusion imaging may detect early signs of infl...

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Veröffentlicht in:NeuroImage clinical 2020-01, Vol.25, p.102099-102099, Article 102099
Hauptverfasser: Pflanz, Chris Patrick, Charquero-Ballester, Marina, Majid, D.S. Adnan, Winkler, Anderson M., Vallée, Emmanuel, Aron, Adam R., Jenkinson, Mark, Douaud, Gwenaëlle
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:•Differences in preHD in one-year MD change in posterior basal ganglia and CC splenium.•Non-monotonic effect driven by MD decrease in FAR group and increase in MID/NEAR.•Only 1 clinical measure shows difference in 1y change between preclinical stages.•Diffusion imaging may detect early signs of inflammation preceding degeneration. To determine whether brain imaging markers of tissue microstructure can detect the effect of disease progression across the preclinical stages of Huntington's disease. Longitudinal microstructural changes in diffusion imaging metrics (mean diffusivity and fractional anisotropy) were investigated in participants with presymptomatic Huntington's disease (N = 35) stratified into three preclinical subgroups according to their estimated time until onset of symptoms, compared with age- and gender-matched healthy controls (N = 19) over a 1y period. Significant differences were found over the four groups in change of mean diffusivity in the posterior basal ganglia and the splenium of the corpus callosum. This overall effect was driven by significant differences between the group far-from-onset (FAR) of symptoms and the groups midway- (MID) and near-the-onset (NEAR) of symptoms. In particular, an initial decrease of mean diffusivity in the FAR group was followed by a subsequent increase in groups closer to onset of symptoms. The seemingly counter-intuitive decrease of mean diffusivity in the group furthest from onset of symptoms might be an early indicator of neuroinflammatory process preceding the neurodegenerative phase. In contrast, the only clinical measure that was able to capture a difference in 1y changes between the preclinical stages was the UHDRS confidence in motor score. With sensitivity to longitudinal changes in brain microstructure within and between preclinical stages, and potential differential response to distinct pathophysiological mechanisms, diffusion imaging is a promising state marker for monitoring treatment response and identifying the optimal therapeutic window of opportunity in preclinical Huntington's disease.
ISSN:2213-1582
2213-1582
DOI:10.1016/j.nicl.2019.102099