Abstract

Reliable markers to monitor PPMS are still needed. We investigated whether conventional and DTI measures of thalamic damage are predictive of long-term disability accumulation in PPMS. Brain conventional and DTI scans were obtained at baseline and after a mean follow-up of 15 months in 54 patients with PPMS and 8 healthy controls. Patients were reassessed clinically after 5 years. At baseline and follow-up, measures of lesion load, brain atrophy, and NTV were obtained. MD and FA histograms of the NAWM, the whole GM without the thalami, and the thalami were obtained. A multivariate analysis evaluated the predictors of long-term neurologic deterioration. At follow-up, 35 patients showed disability worsening. At baseline, compared with healthy controls, patients with PPMS had lower NTV (P < .001) and thalamic FA (P = .002) and higher thalamic (P = .002) and whole GM without the thalami (P = .005) MD. During follow-up, the change of thalamic FA was higher in PPMS versus healthy controls (P = .01). Baseline NTV and thalamic DTI quantities differed significantly between patients with PPMS with and without thalamic lesions. Baseline thalamic quantities were significantly correlated with the extent of brain T2 lesions and the severity of NAWM damage. The multivariate model included average NAWM MD (OR = 1.46, P = .005) and FA thalamic change (OR = 0.84, P = .02) as independent predictors of EDSS score deterioration (Nagelkerke R(2) = 0.55). Short-term accrual of thalamic damage and the severity of NAWM involvement predict the long-term accumulation of disability in PPMS.

Highlights

  • AND PURPOSE: Reliable markers to monitor PPMS are still needed

  • Several studies have emphasized the role of GM abnormalities and their relationship to clinical disability in PPMS.[5,6,7,9]

  • NTV and DTI quantities from the thalami and the GM without the thalami remained stable during the 15-month follow-up, whereas during the same study period, patients with PPMS showed a significant worsening of all the MR imaging quantities analyzed, except for average GM without thalami MD

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Summary

Objectives

The objective of this study was to determine the relative contribution of baseline damage to the thalamus as well as its change during a 15-month period in predicting the accumulation of disability during the subsequent 5 years in this cohort of patients

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