Abstract

Objective: Brain atrophy is an established biomarker for dementia, yet spinal cord involvement has not been investigated to date. As the spinal cord is relaying sensorimotor control signals from the cortex to the peripheral nervous system and vice-versa, it is indeed a very interesting question to assess whether it is affected by atrophy due to a disease that is known for its involvement of cognitive domains first and foremost, with motor symptoms being clinically assessed too. We, therefore, hypothesize that in Alzheimer’s disease (AD), severe atrophy can affect the spinal cord too and that spinal cord atrophy is indeed an important in vivo imaging biomarker contributing to understanding neurodegeneration associated with dementia.Methods: 3DT1 images of 31 AD and 35 healthy control (HC) subjects were processed to calculate volume of brain structures and cross-sectional area (CSA) and volume (CSV) of the cervical cord [per vertebra as well as the C2-C3 pair (CSA23 and CSV23)]. Correlated features (ρ > 0.7) were removed, and the best subset identified for patients’ classification with the Random Forest algorithm. General linear model regression was used to find significant differences between groups (p ≤ 0.05). Linear regression was implemented to assess the explained variance of the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score as a dependent variable with the best features as predictors.Results: Spinal cord features were significantly reduced in AD, independently of brain volumes. Patients classification reached 76% accuracy when including CSA23 together with volumes of hippocampi, left amygdala, white and gray matter, with 74% sensitivity and 78% specificity. CSA23 alone explained 13% of MMSE variance.Discussion: Our findings reveal that C2-C3 spinal cord atrophy contributes to discriminate AD from HC, together with more established features. The results show that CSA23, calculated from the same 3DT1 scan as all other brain volumes (including right and left hippocampi), has a considerable weight in classification tasks warranting further investigations. Together with recent studies revealing that AD atrophy is spread beyond the temporal lobes, our result adds the spinal cord to a number of unsuspected regions involved in the disease. Interestingly, spinal cord atrophy explains also cognitive scores, which could significantly impact how we model sensorimotor control in degenerative diseases with a primary cognitive domain involvement. Prospective studies should be purposely designed to understand the mechanisms of atrophy and the role of the spinal cord in AD.

Highlights

  • Dementia is one of the most debilitating cognitive neurodegenerative disorders affecting the central nervous system in elderly people and having a significant impact on daily life activities

  • The present work is pioneering the investigation of spinal cord alterations in patients with dementia, and in particular with Alzheimer’s disease (AD), a major neurodegenerative disease known for its profound effects on cognitive functions

  • Our work goes further and demonstrates that volumes of all cervical vertebral segments are reduced in AD, with the CSV of the first and second vertebrae being significantly atrophic with respect to healthy controls (HC)

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Summary

Introduction

Dementia is one of the most debilitating cognitive neurodegenerative disorders affecting the central nervous system in elderly people and having a significant impact on daily life activities. As the spinal cord is relaying sensorimotor control signals from the cortex to the peripheral nervous system and vice versa, it is important to assess whether it is affected by atrophy in a disease that is known for its involvement of cognitive domains. Post-mortem histopathology has indicated that phosphorylated tau tangles are present in high proportion in the cervical spinal cord of AD cases compared to healthy subjects (Dugger et al, 2013). This is supported by studies in different animal models of AD where pathological changes are demonstrated in the spinal cord as well as the brain (Yuan et al, 2013; Chu et al, 2017). It is important to understand first of all whether the spinal cord plays a part in this disease and to understand how significant its involvement is

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