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Parkinson Disease Propagation Using MRI Biomarkers and Partial Least Squares Path Modeling

Authors :
Marie Vidailhet
Cecile Gallea
Claire Ewenczyk
Rahul Gaurav
Lydia Yahia-Cherif
Romain Valabregue
Isabelle Arnulf
Stéphane Lehéricy
Sara Fernandez-Vidal
Nadya Pyatigorskaya
Fatma Gargouri
Source :
Neurology. 96:e460-e471
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health), 2020.

Abstract

ObjectivesThe classic Braak neuropathologic staging model in Parkinson disease (PD) suggests that brain lesions progress from the medulla oblongata to the cortex. An alternative model in which neurodegeneration first occurs in the cortex has also been proposed. These 2 models may correspond to different patient phenotypes. To test these 2 models and to investigate whether they were influenced by the presence of REM sleep behavior disorder (RBD), we used multimodal MRI and partial least squares path modeling (PLS-PM) assuming that patients with RBD followed distinct neurodegeneration pattern.MethodsFifty-four patients with PD (34 with RBD) and 25 healthy volunteers were scanned with T1-weighted, diffusion tensor, and neuromelanin-sensitive imaging. Volume, signal, and mean, axial, and radial diffusivities were calculated in brainstem, basal forebrain, and cortical regions. PLS-PM, estimating a network of causal relationships between blocks of variables, was used to build and test an analytical model based on Braak staging. The overall quality of the model was assessed with goodness of fit coefficient (Gof).ResultsPLS-PM was run on patients with PD with RBD and without RBD separately. In PD with RBD, a brainstem-to-cortex model had significant Gof (0.71,p= 0.01), whereas a cortex-to-brainstem model did not. In contrast, in patients with PD without RBD, the brainstem-to-cortex model was not significant (Gof = 0.64,p= 0.27), and the cortex-to-brainstem model was highly significant (Gof = 0.72,p= 0.008).ConclusionsWith the PLS-PM imaging–based model, the neurodegeneration pattern of patients with PD with RBD was consistent with the Braak brainstem-to-cortex model, whereas that of patients without RBD followed the cortex-to-brainstem model.

Details

ISSN :
1526632X and 00283878
Volume :
96
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....703f34e66eea61ce3a2d774fc4d53359
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1212/wnl.0000000000011155