Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAtrophy of thalamic subregions has been observed across the spectrum of frontotemporal dementia (FTD). To gain better insight into underlying tissue changes, we investigated how thalamic subregional fractional anisotropy (FA) and mean diffusivity (MD) derived from diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) are altered in genetic FTD.MethodWe used our newly developed thalamus segmentation tool, which jointly combines structural and diffusion input MRI data, to segment thalami and extract thalamic subregional FA and MD values for 163 genetic mutation carriers and 126 non‐carriers with suitable 3T MRI data from the GENetic FTD Initiative (GENFI). Mutation carriers were divided according to their genetic diagnosis and CDR®+NACC FTLD global scores into presymptomatic/prodromal (≤0.5: 41 C9orf72, 59 GRN, 34 MAPT) and symptomatic (≥1: 8 C9orf72, 11 GRN, 10 MAPT) groups. Mean FA and MD values for thalamic subregions were obtained using diffusion tensors interpolated in the log domain and weighted by segmentation posterior probabilities. Thalamic subregional FA and MD values for presymptomatic and symptomatic mutation carriers within each genetic group were compared with non‐carriers using analysis of covariance with bootstrapping, where age, scanner type, and sex were covariates. We corrected for multiple comparisons and calculated percentage changes in adjusted FA and MD mean values for mutation carriers relative to non‐carriers.ResultThe only significant change at the presymptomatic stage was found for C9orf72 expansion carriers, who showed FA reduction in the intralaminar subregion (5%) (Figure 1, Table 1). In symptomatic C9orf72 expansion carriers, FA was reduced in the laterodorsal (21%), lateral posterior (13%), anteroventral (13%) and intralaminar (11%) subregions. Symptomatic MAPT mutation carriers also showed FA reduction in the laterodorsal (15%) and anteroventral (11%) subregions. No significant FA reductions were found for GRN mutation carriers and no significant MD changes were observed for any group after correction for multiple comparisons.ConclusionWe detected FA reductions of thalamic subregions only for C9orf72 expansion carriers at the presymptomatic stage, and for C9orf72 and MAPT mutation carriers at the symptomatic stage. Combined with the lack of robust MD changes, our findings may warrant further assessment of thalamic microstructure with more advanced diffusion models.

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