Large, Nonplateauing Relationship Between Clinical Disability and Cerebral White Matter Lesion Load in Patients With Multiple Sclerosis

被引:20
作者
Caramanos, Zografos [1 ]
Francis, Simon James [1 ]
Narayanan, Sridar [1 ]
Lapierre, Yves [2 ]
Arnold, Douglas Lorne [1 ]
机构
[1] McGill Univ, Montreal Neurol Inst, Magnet Resonance Spect Unit, McConnell Brain Imaging Ctr, Montreal, PQ H3A 2B4, Canada
[2] McGill Univ, Montreal Neurol Inst, Clin Res Unit, Montreal, PQ H3A 2B4, Canada
基金
加拿大健康研究院;
关键词
STATUS SCALE; MAGNETIZATION-TRANSFER; OUTCOME MEASURE; MRI; ATROPHY; BRAIN;
D O I
10.1001/archneurol.2011.765
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Objective: To better characterize the relationship between cerebral white matter lesion load (CWM-LL) and clinical disability by (1) covering the entire range of the Kurtzke Expanded Disability Status Scale (EDSS), (2) minimizing nonbiological sources of variability, and (3) increasing pathologic specificity by studying CWM lesions that are hypointense on T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging. Design: Cross-sectional, retrospective study. Setting: Hospital-based multiple sclerosis (MS) clinic. Patients: A total of 110 patients with untreated MS were recruited and studied from June 1, 1997, through June 30, 2003. Main Outcome Measures: Cube-rooted CWM-LL and EDSS-measured clinical disability scores. Results: We found a large, nonplateauing relationship between cube-rooted CWM-LL and concurrent EDSS scores, more so for T1-hypointense than T2-hyperintense lesions (r=0.619 vs 0.548). Correlations between the EDSS scores and CWM-LL diminished when, as typically done in clinical trials, only those patients with EDSS scores of 0 to 6.0 were studied(n=92; r=0.523 for T1-hypointense lesions and r=0.457 for T2-hyperintense lesions); more important, a series of boot-strapped correlations suggested that this decrease was not simply due to smaller sample size, and these relationships remained even after correcting for disease duration. Conclusion: A large, nonplateauing relationship exists between CWM-LL and EDSS-measured clinical disability when patients with MS are studied to examine the entire range of disability, minimize nonbiological sources of variability, and increase pathologic specificity.
引用
收藏
页码:89 / 95
页数:7
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Relationship Between White Matter Connectivity Loss and Cortical Thinning in Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy
    Reijmer, Yael D.
    Fotiadis, Panagiotis
    Charidimou, Andreas
    van Veluw, Susanne J.
    Xiong, Li
    Riley, Grace A.
    Martinez-Ramirez, Sergi
    Schwab, Kristin
    Viswanathan, Anand
    Gurol, M. Edip
    Greenberg, Steven M.
    HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, 2017, 38 (07) : 3723 - 3731
  • [22] Relationship between carotid arterial properties and cerebral white matter hyperintensities
    Rundek, Tatjana
    Della-Morte, David
    Gardener, Hannah
    Dong, Chuanhui
    Markert, Matthew S.
    Gutierrez, Jose
    Roberts, Eugene
    Elkind, Mitchell S. V.
    DeCarli, Charles
    Sacco, Ralph L.
    Wright, Clinton B.
    NEUROLOGY, 2017, 88 (21) : 2036 - 2042
  • [23] Cortical and white matter lesion topology influences focal corpus callosum atrophy in multiple sclerosis
    Platten, Michael
    Ouellette, Russell
    Herranz, Elena
    Barletta, Valeria
    Treaba, Constantina A.
    Mainero, Caterina
    Granberg, Tobias
    JOURNAL OF NEUROIMAGING, 2022, 32 (03) : 471 - 479
  • [24] Spinal cord atrophy in multiple sclerosis and relationship with disability across clinical phenotypes
    Bernitsas, Evanthia
    Bao, Fen
    Seraji-Bozorgzad, Navid
    Chorostecki, Jessica
    Santiago, Carla
    Tselis, Alexandros
    Caon, Christina
    Zak, Imad
    Millis, Scott
    Khan, Omar
    MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS AND RELATED DISORDERS, 2015, 4 (01) : 47 - 51
  • [25] Neurological disability and brain grey matter atrophy in primary progressive multiple sclerosis are determined by microstructural lesional changes, but not by lesion load
    Ladopoulos, Theodoros
    Abbas, Zainab
    Krieger, Britta
    Bellenberg, Barbara
    James, Jeyanthan Charles
    Bauer, Jana
    Gold, Ralf
    Lukas, Carsten
    Schneider, Ruth
    JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY, 2025, 272 (04)
  • [26] Exploring the Relationship Between White Matter and Gray Matter Damage in Early Primary Progressive Multiple Sclerosis: An In Vivo Study With TBSS and VBM
    Bodini, Benedetta
    Khaleeli, Zhaleh
    Cercignani, Mara
    Miller, David H.
    Thompson, Alan J.
    Ciccarelli, Olga
    HUMAN BRAIN MAPPING, 2009, 30 (09) : 2852 - 2861
  • [27] The spatio-temporal relationship between white matter lesion volume changes and brain atrophy in clinically isolated syndrome and early multiple sclerosis
    Mattiesing, Rozemarijn M.
    Gentile, Giordano
    Brouwer, Iman
    van Schijndel, Ronald A.
    Uitdehaag, Bernard M. J.
    Twisk, Jos W. R.
    Kappos, Ludwig
    Freedman, Mark S.
    Comi, Giancarlo
    Jack, Dominic
    De Stefano, Nicola
    Barkhof, Frederik
    Battaglini, Marco
    Vrenken, Hugo
    NEUROIMAGE-CLINICAL, 2022, 36
  • [28] Relationship between iron accumulation and white matter injury in multiple sclerosis: a case–control study
    Eytan Raz
    Brittany Branson
    Jens H. Jensen
    Maxim Bester
    James S. Babb
    Joseph Herbert
    Robert I. Grossman
    Matilde Inglese
    Journal of Neurology, 2015, 262 : 402 - 409
  • [29] Fractional anisotropy of white matter, disability and blood iron parameters in multiple sclerosis
    Herbert, Estelle
    Engel-Hills, Penelope
    Hattingh, Coenraad
    Fouche, Jean-Paul
    Kidd, Martin
    Lochner, Christine
    Kotze, Maritha J.
    van Rensburg, Susan J.
    METABOLIC BRAIN DISEASE, 2018, 33 (02) : 545 - 557
  • [30] Association Between Thoracic Spinal Cord Gray Matter Atrophy and Disability in Multiple Sclerosis
    Schlaeger, Regina
    Papinutto, Nico
    Zhu, Alyssa H.
    Lobach, Iryna V.
    Bevan, Carolyn J.
    Bucci, Monica
    Castellano, Antonella
    Gelfand, Jeffrey M.
    Graves, Jennifer S.
    Green, Ari J.
    Jordan, Kesshi M.
    Keshavan, Anisha
    Panara, Valentina
    Stern, William A.
    von Buedingen, H. -Christian
    Waubant, Emmanuelle
    Goodin, Douglas S.
    Cree, Bruce A. C.
    Hauser, Stephen L.
    Henry, Roland G.
    JAMA NEUROLOGY, 2015, 72 (08) : 897 - 904