Abstract
Traumatic brain injury is a global public health problem associated with chronic neurological complications and long-term disability. Biomarkers that map onto the underlying brain pathology driving these complications are urgently needed to identify individuals at risk for poor recovery and to inform design of clinical trials of neuroprotective therapies. Neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration are two endophenotypes potentially associated with increases in brain extracellular water content, but the nature of extracellular free water abnormalities after neurotrauma and its relationship to measures typically thought to reflect traumatic axonal injury are not well characterized. The objective of this study was to describe the relationship between a neuroimaging biomarker of extracellular free water content and the clinical features of a cohort with primarily complicated mild traumatic brain injury. We analyzed a cohort of 59 adult patients requiring hospitalization for non-penetrating traumatic brain injury of all severities as well as 36 healthy controls. Patients underwent brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at 2 weeks (n = 59) and 6 months (n = 29) post-injury, and controls underwent a single MRI. Of the participants with TBI, 50 underwent clinical neuropsychological assessment at 2 weeks and 28 at 6 months. For each subject, we derived a summary score representing deviations in whole brain white matter extracellular free water volume fraction (VF) and free water-corrected fractional anisotropy (fw-FA). The summary specific anomaly score (SAS) for VF was significantly higher in TBI patients at 2 weeks and 6 months post-injury relative to controls. SAS for VF exhibited moderate correlation with neuropsychological functioning, particularly on measures of executive function. These findings indicate abnormalities in whole brain white matter extracellular water fraction in patients with TBI and are an important step toward identifying and validating noninvasive biomarkers that map onto the pathology driving disability after TBI.
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