Abstract

Abstract BACKGROUND Many patients with glioma suffer from poorly understood executive functioning deficits before and/or after tumor resection. In the past decade, it has become increasingly clear that there is a complex interplay between glioma and both local and global functional activity and connectivity. Moreover, multilayer network integration of the frontoparietal network across multiple modalities has recently been found to explain individual differences in executive functioning in healthy subjects. OBJECTIVE To test whether multilayer frontoparietal network integration relates to individual differences in executive functioning before and after glioma resection. METHODS Patients with glioma (n = 37) underwent neuropsychological tests assessing word fluency, inhibition, and set shifting as components of executive functioning, and resting-state magnetoencephalography at T1 (at diagnosis, before resection) and T2 (1 year after resection). We constructed binary multilayer networks comprising six layers, with each layer representing frequency-specific functional connectivity between source-localized time series of 78 cortical regions. Average frontoparietal network multilayer eigenvector centrality, a measure for network integration, was calculated at both time points. Regression analyses were used to investigate associations with executive functioning. RESULTS At T1, lower multilayer integration (p = .017) and having epilepsy (p = .006) associated with poorer set shifting. Decreasing multilayer integration (p = .022) between T1 and T2 and not undergoing chemotherapy at T2 (p = .004) related to deteriorating set shifting. No significant associations were found for word fluency or inhibition. CONCLUSION As hypothesized, our results establish multilayer integration of the frontoparietal network as a cross-sectional and longitudinal correlate of executive functioning in glioma patients, further building upon the idea that glioma impacts the whole brain network and general cognitive functioning. However, multilayer integration did not significantly predict postoperative changes in executive functioning, limiting the direct clinical relevance of this measure.

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