Abstract

Background: Reduced myelin water fraction (MWF, a marker for myelin), increased geometric mean T2 (ieGMT2, reflecting intra/extracellular water properties), and increased T1 (related to total water content) have been observed in cross-sectional studies of multiple sclerosis (MS) normal-appearing white matter (NAWM). Objective: To assess longitudinal changes of magnetic resonance (MR) measures in relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS) brain NAWM. Methods: A total of 11 subjects with RRMS and 4 controls were scanned on a 3T MRI at baseline and long-term follow-up (LTFU; 3.2–5.8 years) with a 32-echo T2 relaxation and an inversion recovery T1 sequence. For every voxel, MWF, ieGMT2, and T1 were obtained. Mean, peak height, and peak location from NAWM mask-based histograms were determined. Results: In MS subjects, NAWM MWF mean decreased by 8% (p = 0.0016). No longitudinal changes were measured in T1 or ieGMT2. There was no relationship between change in any MR metric and change in EDSS. Control white matter showed no differences over time in any metric. Conclusion: The decreases we observed in MWF suggest that changes in myelin integrity and loss of myelin may be occurring diffusely and over long time periods in the MS brain. The timescale of these changes indicates that chronic, progressive myelin damage is an evolving process occurring over many years.

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