Abstract

Peak width of skeletonized mean diffusivity (PSMD) is an emerging diffusion-MRI based marker to study subtle early alterations to white matter microstructure. We assessed PSMD over the clinical continuum in Dutch-type hereditary CAA (D-CAA) and its association with other CAA-related MRI-markers and cognitive symptoms. We included (pre)symptomatic D-CAA mutation-carriers and calculated PSMD from diffusion-MRI data. Associations between PSMD-levels, cognitive performance and CAA-related MRI-markers were assessed with linear regression models. We included 59 participants (25/34 presymptomatic/symptomatic; mean age 39/58 y). PSMD-levels increased with disease severity and were higher in symptomatic D-CAA mutation-carriers (median [range] 4.90 [2.77–9.50]mm2/s × 10−4) compared with presymptomatic mutation-carriers (2.62 [1.96–3.43]mm2/s × 10−4) p = <0.001. PSMD was positively correlated with age, CAA-SVD burden on MRI (adj.B [confidence interval] = 0.42 [0.16–0.67], p = 0.002), with number of cerebral microbleeds (adj.B = 0.30 [0.08–0.53], p = 0.009), and with both deep (adj.B = 0.46 [0.22–0.69], p = <0.001) and periventricular (adj.B = 0.38 [0.13–0.62], p = 0.004) white matter hyperintensities. Increasing PSMD was associated with decreasing Trail Making Test (TMT)-A performance (B = −0.42 [−0.69–0.14], p = 0.04. In D-CAA mutation-carriers microstructural white matter damage is associated with disease phase, CAA burden on MRI and cognitive impairment as reflected by a decrease in information processing speed. PSMD, as a global measure of alterations to the white matter microstructure, may be a useful tool to monitor disease progression in CAA.

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