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Quantitative Imaging Biomarkers of Damage to Critical Memory Regions Are Associated With Post-Radiation Therapy Memory Performance in Brain Tumor Patients.

Authors :
Tringale, Kathryn R
Tringale, Kathryn R
Nguyen, Tanya T
Karunamuni, Roshan
Seibert, Tyler
Huynh-Le, Minh-Phuong
Connor, Michael
Moiseenko, Vitali
Gorman, Mary Kay
Marshall, Anisa
Tibbs, Michelle Devereux
Farid, Nikdokht
Simpson, Daniel
Sanghvi, Parag
McDonald, Carrie R
Hattangadi-Gluth, Jona A
Tringale, Kathryn R
Tringale, Kathryn R
Nguyen, Tanya T
Karunamuni, Roshan
Seibert, Tyler
Huynh-Le, Minh-Phuong
Connor, Michael
Moiseenko, Vitali
Gorman, Mary Kay
Marshall, Anisa
Tibbs, Michelle Devereux
Farid, Nikdokht
Simpson, Daniel
Sanghvi, Parag
McDonald, Carrie R
Hattangadi-Gluth, Jona A
Source :
International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics; vol 105, iss 4, 773-783; 0360-3016
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

PurposeWe 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).Methods and materialsPatients 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.ResultsVisuospatial 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.ConclusionsBrain

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics; vol 105, iss 4, 773-783; 0360-3016
Notes :
application/pdf, International journal of radiation oncology, biology, physics vol 105, iss 4, 773-783 0360-3016
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1391604135
Document Type :
Electronic Resource