Abstract

Cognitive impairment is a debilitating symptom of multiple sclerosis (MS) that affects up to 70% of patients. An improved understanding of the underlying pathology of MS-related cognitive impairment would provide considerable benefit to patients and clinicians. To determine whether there is an association between myelin damage in tissue that appears completely normal on standard clinical imaging, but can be detected by myelin water imaging (MWI), with cognitive performance in MS. In this cross-sectional study, participants with MS and controls underwent cognitive testing and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) from August 23, 2017, to February 20, 2019. Participants were recruited through the University of British Columbia Hospital MS clinic and via online recruitment advertisements on local health authority websites. Cognitive testing was performed in the MS clinic, and MRI was performed at the adjacent academic research neuroimaging center. Seventy-three participants with clinically definite MS fulfilling the 2017 revised McDonald criteria for diagnosis and 22 age-, sex-, and education-matched healthy volunteers without neurological disease were included in the study. Data analysis was performed from March to November 2019. MWI was performed at 3 T with a 48-echo, 3-dimensional, gradient and spin-echo (GRASE) sequence. Cognitive testing was performed with assessments drawn from cognitive batteries validated for use in MS. The association between myelin water measures, a measurement of the T2 relaxation signal from water in the myelin bilayers providing a specific marker for myelin, and cognitive test scores was assessed using Pearson correlation. Three white matter regions of interest-the cingulum, superior longitudinal fasciculus (SLF), and corpus callosum-were selected a priori according to their known involvement in MS-related cognitive impairment. For the 95 total participants, the mean (SD) age was 49.33 (11.44) years. The mean (SD) age was 50.2 (10.7) years for the 73 participants with MS and 46.4 (13.5) for the 22 controls. Forty-eight participants with MS (66%) and 14 controls (64%) were women. The mean (SD) years of education were 14.7 (2.2) for patients and 15.8 (2.5) years for controls. In MS, significant associations were observed between myelin water measures and scores on the Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SLF, r = -0.490; 95% CI, -0.697 to -0.284; P < .001; corpus callosum, r = -0.471; 95% CI, -0.680 to -0.262; P < .001; and cingulum, r = -0.419; 95% CI, -0.634 to -0.205; P < .001), Selective Reminding Test (SLF, r = -0.444; 95% CI, -0.660 to -0.217; P < .001; corpus callosum, r = -0.411; 95% CI, -0.630 to -0.181; P = .001; and cingulum, r = -0.361; 95% CI, -0.602 to -0.130; P = .003), and Controlled Oral Word Association Test (SLF, r = -0.317; 95% CI, -0.549 to -0.078; P = .01; and cingulum, r = -0.335; 95% CI, -0.658 to -0.113; P = .006). No significant associations were found in controls. This study used MWI to demonstrate that otherwise normal-appearing brain tissue is diffusely damaged in MS, and the findings suggest that myelin water measures are associated with cognitive performance. MWI offers an in vivo biomarker feasible for use in clinical trials investigating cognition, providing a means for monitoring changes in myelination and its association with symptom worsening or improvement.

Highlights

  • Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an inflammatory, neurodegenerative disease of the central nervous system[1] that affects more than 2 million people globally, rendering it the most prevalent chronic neuroinflammatory disease of the central nervous system worldwide.[2]

  • In multiple sclerosis (MS), significant associations were observed between myelin water measures and scores on the Symbol Digit Modalities Test (SLF, r = −0.490; 95% CI, −0.697 to −0.284; P < .001; corpus callosum, r = −0.471; 95% CI, −0.680 to −0.262; P < .001; and cingulum, r = −0.419; 95% CI, −0.634 to −0.205; P < .001), Selective Reminding Test

  • No significant associations were found between myelin measures and cognitive performance in controls. Meaning These findings suggest that myelin damage that is completely invisible on standard clinical images but can be measured using myelin water imaging is involved in MS-related cognitive impairment

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Summary

Introduction

Multiple sclerosis (MS) is an inflammatory, neurodegenerative disease of the central nervous system[1] that affects more than 2 million people globally, rendering it the most prevalent chronic neuroinflammatory disease of the central nervous system worldwide.[2]. It is a major contributor to unemployment in patients with MS.[5,8] Undoubtedly, cognitive impairment presents a major burden to those living with MS, and an improved understanding of its underlying pathology would be of great benefit to patients and clinicians

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