Abstract

White matter (WM) tract disruption impacts volume loss in connected deep gray matter (DGM) over 5years in people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS). However, the timeline of this phenomenon remains poorly characterized. Annual serial MRI for 181 PwMS was retrospectively analyzed from a 10-year clinical trial database. Annualized thalamic atrophy, DGM atrophy, and disruption of connected WM tracts were measured. For time series analysis, ~700 epochs were collated using a sliding 5-year window, and regression models predicting 1-year atrophy were applied to characterize the influence of new tract disruption from preceding years, while controlling for whole brain atrophy and other relevant factors. Disruptions of WM tracts connected to the thalamus were significantly associated with thalamic atrophy 1year later (β: 0.048-0.103). This effect was not observed for thalamic tract disruption concurrent with the time of atrophy nor for thalamic tract disruption preceding the atrophy by 2-4years. Similarly, disruptions of white matter tracts connected to the DGM were significantly associated with DGM atrophy 1year later (β: 0.078-0.111), but not for tract disruption concurrent with, nor preceding the atrophy by 2-4years. Increased rates of thalamic and DGM atrophy were restricted to 1year following newly developed disruption in connected WM tracts. In research and clinical settings, additional gray matter atrophy may be expected 1year following new lesion growth in connected white matter.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call