Resting-state connectivity stratifies premanifest Huntington's disease by longitudinal cognitive decline rate.
Pablo PoloseckiEduardo CastroIrina RishDorian PustinaJohn H WarnerAndrew WoodCristina SampaioGuillermo A CecchiPublished in: Scientific reports (2020)
Patient stratification is critical for the sensitivity of clinical trials at early stages of neurodegenerative disorders. In Huntington's disease (HD), genetic tests make cognitive, motor and brain imaging measurements possible before symptom manifestation (pre-HD). We evaluated pre-HD stratification models based on single visit resting-state functional MRI (rs-fMRI) data that assess observed longitudinal motor and cognitive change rates from the multisite Track-On HD cohort (74 pre-HD, 79 control participants). We computed longitudinal performance change on 10 tasks (including visits from the preceding TRACK-HD study when available), as well as functional connectivity density (FCD) maps in single rs-fMRI visits, which showed high test-retest reliability. We assigned pre-HD subjects to subgroups of fast, intermediate, and slow change along single tasks or combinations of them, correcting for expectations based on aging; and trained FCD-based classifiers to distinguish fast- from slow-progressing individuals. For robustness, models were validated across imaging sites. Stratification models distinguished fast- from slow-changing participants and provided continuous assessments of decline applicable to the whole pre-HD population, relying on previously-neglected white matter functional signals. These results suggest novel correlates of early deterioration and a robust stratification strategy where a single MRI measurement provides an estimate of multiple ongoing longitudinal changes.
Keyphrases
- resting state
- functional connectivity
- cognitive decline
- white matter
- clinical trial
- high resolution
- cross sectional
- magnetic resonance imaging
- working memory
- mild cognitive impairment
- diffusion weighted imaging
- computed tomography
- randomized controlled trial
- contrast enhanced
- body composition
- copy number
- brain injury
- blood brain barrier
- resistance training
- photodynamic therapy
- subarachnoid hemorrhage
- phase ii