Neuroimmune signatures in chronic low back pain subtypes

被引:41
作者
Alshelh, Zeynab [1 ]
Brusaferri, Ludovica [1 ]
Saha, Atreyi [1 ]
Morrissey, Erin [1 ]
Knight, Paulina [1 ]
Kim, Minhae [1 ]
Zhang, Yi [2 ]
Hooker, Jacob M. [1 ]
Albrecht, Daniel [1 ]
Torrado-Carvajal, Angel [1 ,3 ]
Placzek, Michael S. [1 ]
Akeju, Oluwaseun [2 ]
Price, Julie [1 ]
Edwards, Robert R. [4 ]
Lee, Jeungchan [1 ]
Sclocco, Roberta [1 ,5 ]
Catana, Ciprian [1 ]
Napadow, Vitaly [1 ,4 ]
Loggia, Marco L. [1 ]
机构
[1] Harvard Med Sch, Athinoula A Martinos Ctr Biomed Imaging, Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Dept Radiol, 149 Thirteenth St,Room 2301, Charlestown, MA 02129 USA
[2] Harvard Med Sch, Massachusetts Gen Hosp, Dept Anesthesia Crit Care & Pain Med, Boston, MA 02115 USA
[3] Univ Rey Juan Carlos, Med Image Anal & Biometry Lab, Madrid, Spain
[4] Harvard Med Sch, Brigham & Womens Hosp, Dept Anesthesiol Perioperat & Pain Med, Boston, MA 02115 USA
[5] Logan Univ, Dept Radiol, Chesterfield, MO USA
基金
美国国家卫生研究院;
关键词
glial cells; functional connectivity; chronic pain; neuropathic; inflammation; TRANSLOCATOR PROTEIN TSPO; GLIAL ACTIVATION; BENZODIAZEPINE-RECEPTORS; MICROGLIAL ACTIVATION; PET RADIOLIGAND; SPINAL-CORD; MECHANICAL ALLODYNIA; NEUROPATHIC PAIN; BINDING-SITES; UP-REGULATION;
D O I
10.1093/brain/awab336
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
We recently showed that patients with different chronic pain conditions (such as chronic low back pain, fibromyalgia, migraine and Gulf War illness) demonstrated elevated brain and/or spinal cord levels of the glial marker 18-kDa translocator protein (TSPO), which suggests that neuroinflammation might be a pervasive phenomenon observable across multiple aetiologically heterogeneous pain disorders. Interestingly, the spatial distribution of this neuroinflammatory signal appears to exhibit a degree of disease specificity (e.g. with respect to the involvement of the primary somatosensory cortex), suggesting that different pain conditions may exhibit distinct 'neuroinflammatory signatures'. To explore this hypothesis further, we tested whether neuroinflammatory signal can characterize putative aetiological subtypes of chronic low back pain patients based on clinical presentation. Specifically, we explored neuroinflammation in patients whose chronic low back pain either did or did not radiate to the leg (i.e. 'radicular' versus 'axial' back pain). Fifty-four patients with chronic low back pain, 26 with axial back pain [43.7 +/- 16.6 years old (mean +/- SD)] and 28 with radicular back pain (48.3 +/- 13.2 years old), underwent PET/MRI with C-11-PBR28, a second-generation radioligand for TSPO. C-11-PBR28 signal was quantified using standardized uptake values ratio (validated against volume of distribution ratio; n = 23). Functional MRI data were collected simultaneously to the C-11-PBR28 data (i) to functionally localize the primary somatosensory cortex back and leg subregions; and (ii) to perform functional connectivity analyses (in order to investigate possible neurophysiological correlations of the neuroinflammatory signal). PET and functional MRI measures were compared across groups, cross-correlated with one another and with the severity of 'fibromyalgianess' (i.e. the degree of pain centralization, or 'nociplastic pain'). Furthermore, statistical mediation models were used to explore possible causal relationships between these three variables. For the primary somatosensory cortex representation of back/leg, C-11-PBR28 PET signal and functional connectivity to the thalamus were: (i) higher in radicular compared to axial back pain patients; (ii) positively correlated with each other; (iii) positively correlated with fibromyalgianess scores, across groups; and finally (iv) fibromyalgianess mediated the association between C-11-PBR28 PET signal and primary somatosensory cortex-thalamus connectivity across groups. Our findings support the existence of 'neuroinflammatory signatures' that are accompanied by neurophysiological changes and correlate with clinical presentation (in particular, with the degree of nociplastic pain) in chronic pain patients. These signatures may contribute to the subtyping of distinct pain syndromes and also provide information about interindividual variability in neuroimmune brain signals, within diagnostic groups, that could eventually serve as targets for mechanism-based precision medicine approaches.
引用
收藏
页码:1098 / 1110
页数:13
相关论文
共 86 条
[1]  
Ab Aziz CB, 2006, MALAYS J MED SCI, V13, P11
[2]   The neuroinflammatory component of negative affect in patients with chronic pain [J].
Albrecht, D. S. ;
Kim, M. ;
Akeju, O. ;
Torrado-Carvajal, A. ;
Edwards, R. R. ;
Zhang, Y. ;
Bergan, C. ;
Protsenko, E. ;
Kucyi, A. ;
Wasan, A. D. ;
Hooker, J. M. ;
Napadow, V ;
Loggia, M. L. .
MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY, 2021, 26 (03) :864-874
[3]   Imaging of neuroinflammation in migraine with aura A [11C] PBR28 PET/MRI study [J].
Albrecht, Daniel S. ;
Mainero, Caterina ;
Ichijo, Eri ;
Ward, Noreen ;
Granziera, Cristina ;
Zurcher, Nicole R. ;
Akeju, Oluwaseun ;
Bonnier, Guillaume ;
Price, Julie ;
Hooker, Jacob M. ;
Napadow, Vitaly ;
Loggia, Marco L. ;
Hadjikhani, Nouchine .
NEUROLOGY, 2019, 92 (17) :E2038-E2050
[4]   Brain glial activation in fibromyalgia - A multi-site positron emission tomography investigation [J].
Albrecht, Daniel S. ;
Forsberg, Anton ;
Sandstrom, Angelica ;
Bergan, Courtney ;
Kadetoff, Diana ;
Protsenko, Ekaterina ;
Lampa, Jon ;
Lee, Yvonne C. ;
Hoglund, Caroline Olgart ;
Catana, Ciprian ;
Cervenka, Simon ;
Akeju, Oluwaseun ;
Lekander, Mats ;
Cohen, George ;
Halldin, Christer ;
Taylor, Norman ;
Kim, Minhae ;
Hooker, Jacob M. ;
Edwards, Robert R. ;
Napadow, Vitaly ;
Kosek, Eva ;
Loggia, Marco L. .
BRAIN BEHAVIOR AND IMMUNITY, 2019, 75 :72-83
[5]   Neuroinflammation of the spinal cord and nerve roots in chronic radicular pain patients [J].
Albrecht, Daniel S. ;
Ahmed, Shihab U. ;
Kettner, Norman W. ;
Borra, Ronald J. H. ;
Cohen-Adad, Julien ;
Deng, Hao ;
Houle, Timothy T. ;
Opalacz, Arissa ;
Roth, Sarah A. ;
Melo, Marcos F. Vidal ;
Chen, Lucy ;
Mao, Jianren ;
Hooker, Jacob M. ;
Loggia, Marco L. ;
Zhang, Yi .
PAIN, 2018, 159 (05) :968-977
[6]   Pseudoreference Regions for Glial Imaging with 11C-PBR28: Investigation in 2 Clinical Cohorts [J].
Albrecht, Daniel S. ;
Normandin, Marc D. ;
Shcherbinin, Sergey ;
Wooten, Dustin W. ;
Schwarz, Adam J. ;
Zurcher, Nicole R. ;
Barth, Vanessa N. ;
Guehl, Nicolas J. ;
Akeju, Oluwaseun ;
Atassi, Nazem ;
Veronese, Mattia ;
Turkheimer, Federico ;
Hooker, Jacob M. ;
Loggia, Marco L. .
JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE, 2018, 59 (01) :107-114
[7]   In-vivo imaging of neuroinflammation in veterans with Gulf War illness [J].
Alshelh, Zeynab ;
Albrecht, Daniel S. ;
Bergan, Courtney ;
Akeju, Oluwaseun ;
Clauw, Daniel J. ;
Conboy, Lisa ;
Edwards, Robert R. ;
Kim, Minhae ;
Lee, Yvonne C. ;
Protsenko, Ekaterina ;
Napadow, Vitaly ;
Sullivan, Kimberly ;
Loggia, Marco L. .
BRAIN BEHAVIOR AND IMMUNITY, 2020, 87 :498-507
[8]   Integrated magnetic resonance imaging and [11C]-PBR28 positron emission tomographic imaging in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis [J].
Alshikho, Mohamad J. ;
Zuercher, Nicole R. ;
Loggia, Marco L. ;
Cernasov, Paul ;
Reynolds, Beverly ;
Pijanowski, Olivia ;
Chonde, Daniel B. ;
Izquierdo Garcia, David ;
Mainero, Caterina ;
Catana, Ciprian ;
Chan, James ;
Babu, Suma ;
Paganoni, Sabrina ;
Hooker, Jacob M. ;
Atassi, Nazem .
ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY, 2018, 83 (06) :1186-1197
[9]   Glial activation colocalizes with structural abnormalities in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis [J].
Alshikho, Mohamad J. ;
Zurcher, Nicole R. ;
Loggia, Marco L. ;
Cernasov, Paul ;
Chonde, Daniel B. ;
Garcia, David Izquierdo ;
Yasek, Julia E. ;
Akeju, Oluwaseun ;
Catana, Ciprian ;
Rosen, Bruce R. ;
Cudkowicz, Merit E. ;
Hooker, Jacob M. ;
Atassi, Nazem .
NEUROLOGY, 2016, 87 (24) :2554-2561
[10]  
Bal-Price A, 2001, J NEUROSCI, V21, P6480