Delineating three distinct spatiotemporal patterns of brain atrophy in Parkinson's disease

被引:0
|
作者
Sakato, Yusuke [1 ]
Shima, Atsushi [1 ,2 ]
Terada, Yuta [1 ]
Takeda, Kiyoaki [1 ]
Sakamaki-Tsukita, Haruhi [1 ]
Nishida, Akira [1 ]
Yoshimura, Kenji [1 ]
Wada, Ikko [1 ]
Furukawa, Koji [1 ]
Kambe, Daisuke [1 ]
Togo, Hiroki [3 ,4 ]
Mukai, Yohei [5 ]
Sawamura, Masanori [1 ]
Nakanishi, Etsuro [1 ]
Yamakado, Hodaka [1 ]
Fushimi, Yasutaka [6 ]
Okada, Tomohisa [2 ,6 ]
Takahashi, Yuji [5 ]
Nakamoto, Yuji [6 ]
Takahashi, Ryosuke [1 ]
Hanakawa, Takashi [3 ,4 ]
Sawamoto, Nobukatsu [7 ]
机构
[1] Kyoto Univ, Grad Sch Med, Dept Neurol, Kyoto 6068507, Japan
[2] Kyoto Univ, Human Brain Res Ctr, Grad Sch Med, Kyoto 6068507, Japan
[3] Natl Ctr Neurol & Psychiat, Integrat Brain Imaging Ctr, Dept Adv Neuroimaging, Tokyo 1878551, Japan
[4] Kyoto Univ, Grad Sch Med, Dept Integrated Neuroanat & Neuroimaging, Kyoto 6068501, Japan
[5] Natl Ctr Hosp, Natl Ctr Neurol & Psychiat, Dept Neurol, Tokyo 1878551, Japan
[6] Kyoto Univ, Grad Sch Med, Dept Diagnost Imaging & Nucl Med, Kyoto 6068507, Japan
[7] Kyoto Univ, Grad Sch Med, Dept Human Hlth Sci, 53 Kawahara Cho,Sakyo Ku, Kyoto 6068507, Japan
基金
日本科学技术振兴机构;
关键词
brainstem; limbic; neocortical; structural MRI; unsupervised machine learning algorithm; Lewy pathology; SURFACE-BASED ANALYSIS; MDS TASK-FORCE; COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT; PROGRESSION; MODEL; MOTOR; QUESTIONNAIRE; HETEROGENEITY; DISORDERS; CRITERIA;
D O I
10.1093/brain/awae303
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
The clinical manifestation of Parkinson's disease exhibits significant heterogeneity in the prevalence of non-motor symptoms and the rate of progression of motor symptoms, suggesting that Parkinson's disease can be classified into distinct subtypes. In this study, we aimed to explore this heterogeneity by identifying a set of subtypes with distinct patterns of spatiotemporal trajectories of neurodegeneration.<br /> We applied Subtype and Stage Inference (SuStaIn), an unsupervised machine learning algorithm that combined disease progression modelling with clustering methods, to cortical and subcortical neurodegeneration visible on 3 T structural MRI of a large cross-sectional sample of 504 patients and 279 healthy controls. Serial longitudinal data were available for a subset of 178 patients at the 2-year follow-up and for 140 patients at the 4-year follow-up. In a subset of 210 patients, concomitant Alzheimer's disease pathology was assessed by evaluating amyloid-beta concentrations in the CSF or via the amyloid-specific radiotracer F-18-flutemetamol with PET.<br /> The SuStaIn analysis revealed three distinct subtypes, each characterized by unique patterns of spatiotemporal evolution of brain atrophy: neocortical, limbic and brainstem. In the neocortical subtype, a reduction in brain volume occurred in the frontal and parietal cortices in the earliest disease stage and progressed across the entire neocortex during the early stage, although with relative sparing of the striatum, pallidum, accumbens area and brainstem. The limbic subtype represented comparative regional vulnerability, which was characterized by early volume loss in the amygdala, accumbens area, striatum and temporal cortex, subsequently spreading to the parietal and frontal cortices across disease stage. The brainstem subtype showed gradual rostral progression from the brainstem extending to the amygdala and hippocampus, followed by the temporal and other cortices. Longitudinal MRI data confirmed that 77.8% of participants at the 2-year follow-up and 84.0% at the 4-year follow-up were assigned to subtypes consistent with estimates from the cross-sectional data. This three-subtype model aligned with empirically proposed subtypes based on age at onset, because the neocortical subtype demonstrated characteristics similar to those found in the old-onset phenotype, including older onset and cognitive decline symptoms (P < 0.05). Moreover, the subtypes correspond to the three categories of the neuropathological consensus criteria for symptomatic patients with Lewy pathology, proposing neocortex-, limbic- and brainstem-predominant patterns as different subgroups of alpha-synuclein distributions. Among the subtypes, the prevalence of biomarker evidence of amyloid-beta pathology was comparable. Upon validation, the subtype model might be applied to individual cases, potentially serving as a biomarker to track disease progression and predict temporal evolution.
引用
收藏
页码:3702 / 3713
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [1] Distinct spatiotemporal patterns for disease duration and stage in Parkinson's disease
    Badoud, Simon
    Nicastro, Nicolas
    Garibotto, Valentina
    Burkhard, Pierre R.
    Haller, Sven
    EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE AND MOLECULAR IMAGING, 2016, 43 (03) : 509 - 516
  • [2] Patterns of brain atrophy in Parkinson's disease, progressive supranuclear palsy and multiple system atrophy
    Messina, Demetrio
    Cerasa, Antonio
    Condino, Francesca
    Arabia, Gennarina
    Novellino, Fabiana
    Nicoletti, Giuseppe
    Salsone, Maria
    Morelli, Maurizio
    Lanza, Pier Luigi
    Quattrone, Aldo
    PARKINSONISM & RELATED DISORDERS, 2011, 17 (03) : 172 - 176
  • [3] Distinct Functional and Macrostructural Brain Changes in Parkinson's Disease and Multiple System Atrophy
    Planetta, Peggy J.
    Kurani, Ajay S.
    Shukla, Priyank
    Prodoehl, Janey
    Corcos, Daniel M.
    Comella, Cynthia L.
    McFarland, Nikolaus R.
    Okun, Michael S.
    Vaillancourt, David E.
    HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, 2015, 36 (03) : 1165 - 1179
  • [4] Identification of Parkinson's disease subtypes with distinct brain atrophy progression and its association with clinical progression
    Pan, Guoqing
    Jiang, Yuchao
    Zhang, Wei
    Zhang, Xuejuan
    Wang, Linbo
    Cheng, Wei
    PSYCHORADIOLOGY, 2024, 4
  • [5] Subtypes of Alzheimer's Disease Display Distinct Network Abnormalities Extending Beyond Their Pattern of Brain Atrophy
    Ferreira, Daniel
    Pereira, Joana B.
    Volpe, Giovanni
    Westman, Eric
    FRONTIERS IN NEUROLOGY, 2019, 10
  • [6] Progressive brain atrophy and clinical evolution in Parkinson's disease
    Filippi, Massimo
    Sarasso, Elisabetta
    Piramide, Noemi
    Stojkovic, Tanja
    Stankovic, Iva
    Basaia, Silvia
    Fontana, Andrea
    Tomic, Aleksandra
    Markovic, Vladana
    Stefanova, Elka
    Kostic, Vladimir S.
    Agosta, Federica
    NEUROIMAGE-CLINICAL, 2020, 28
  • [7] Spatiotemporal patterns of brain iron-oxygen metabolism in patients with Parkinson's disease
    Yan, Su
    Lu, Jun
    Li, Yuanhao
    Cho, Junghun
    Zhang, Shun
    Zhu, Wenzhen
    Wang, Yi
    EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY, 2024, 34 (05) : 3074 - 3083
  • [8] Brain Atrophy and White Matter Hyperintensities in Early Parkinson's Disease
    Dalaker, Turi O.
    Larsen, Jan P.
    Bergsland, Niels
    Beyer, Mona K.
    Alves, Guido
    Dwyer, Michael G.
    Tysnes, Ole-Bjorn
    Benedict, Ralph H. B.
    Kelemen, Arpad
    Bronnick, Kolbjorn
    Zivadinov, Robert
    MOVEMENT DISORDERS, 2009, 24 (15) : 2233 - 2241
  • [9] Association of Homocysteine With Ventricular Dilatation and Brain Atrophy in Parkinson's Disease
    Sapkota, Shraddha
    Gee, Myrlene
    Sabino, Jennifer
    Emery, Derek
    Camicioli, Richard
    MOVEMENT DISORDERS, 2014, 29 (03) : 368 - 374
  • [10] Brain atrophy in Parkinson's disease with polysomnography-confirmed REM sleep behavior disorder
    Rahayel, Shady
    Gaubert, Malo
    Postuma, Ronald B.
    Montplaisir, Jacques
    Carrier, Julie
    Monchi, Oury
    Remillard-Pelchat, David
    Bourgouin, Pierre-Alexandre
    Panisset, Michel
    Chouinard, Sylvain
    Joubert, Sven
    Gagnon, Jean-Francois
    SLEEP, 2019, 42 (06)