Document detail
ID

oai:HAL:hal-03170286v1

Topic
[SDV]Life Sciences [q-bio]
Author
Gaurav, Rahul Yahia‐cherif, Lydia Pyatigorskaya, Nadya Mangone, Graziella Biondetti, Emma Valabrègue, Romain Ewenczyk, Claire Hutchison, R. Matthew Cedarbaum, Jesse, M Corvol, Jean‐christophe Vidailhet, Marie Lehéricy, Stéphane
Langue
en
Editor

HAL CCSD;Wiley

Category

CNRS - Centre national de la recherche scientifique

Year

2021

listing date

12/15/2023

Keywords
corrected included progressing significant intracranial total longitudinal neuromelanin parkinson volume patients signal changes ratio pd disease volunteers
Metrics

Abstract

International audience; BackgroundDevelopment of reliable and accurate imaging biomarkers of dopaminergic cell neurodegeneration is necessary to facilitate therapeutic drug trials in Parkinson's disease (PD).

Neuromelanin‐sensitive MRI techniques have been effective in detecting neurodegeneration in the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc).

The objective of the current study was to investigate longitudinal neuromelanin signal changes in the SNpc in PD patients.MethodsIn this prospective, longitudinal, observational case–control study, we included 140 PD patients and 64 healthy volunteers divided into 2 cohorts.

Cohort I included 99 early PD patients (disease duration, 1.5 ± 1.0 years) and 41 healthy volunteers analyzed at baseline (V1), where 79 PD patients and 32 healthy volunteers were rescanned after 2.0 ± 0.2 years of follow‐up (V2).

Cohort II included 41 progressing PD patients (disease duration, 9.3 ± 3.7 years) and 23 healthy volunteers at V1, where 30 PD patients were rescanned after 2.4 ± 0.5 years of follow‐up.

Subjects were scanned at 3 T MRI using 3‐dimensional T1‐weighted and neuromelanin‐sensitive imaging.

Regions of interest were delineated manually to calculate SN volumes, volumes corrected by total intracranial volume, signal‐to‐noise ratio, and contrast‐to‐noise ratio.ResultsResults showed (1) significant reduction in volume and volume corrected by total intracranial volume between visits, greater in progressing PD than nonsignificant changes in healthy volunteers; (2) no significant effects of visit for signal intensity (signal‐to‐noise ratio); (3) significant interaction in volume between group and visit; (4) greater volume corrected by total intracranial volume at baseline in female patients and greater decrease in volume and increase in the contrast‐to‐noise ratio in progressing female PD patients compared with male patients; and (5) correlations between neuromelanin SN changes and disease severity and duration.ConclusionsWe observed a progressive and measurable decrease in neuromelanin‐based SN signal and volume in PD, which might allow a direct noninvasive assessment of progression of SN loss and could represent a target biomarker for disease‐modifying treatments.

© 2021 The Authors.

Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society

Gaurav, Rahul,Yahia‐cherif, Lydia,Pyatigorskaya, Nadya,Mangone, Graziella,Biondetti, Emma,Valabrègue, Romain,Ewenczyk, Claire,Hutchison, R. Matthew,Cedarbaum, Jesse, M,Corvol, Jean‐christophe,Vidailhet, Marie,Lehéricy, Stéphane, 2021, Longitudinal Changes in Neuromelanin MRI Signal in Parkinson's Disease: A Progression Marker, HAL CCSD;Wiley

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