Functional connectome fingerprinting and stability in multiple sclerosis.

Maron Mantwill, Susanna Asseyer, Claudia Chien, Joseph Kuchling, Tanja Schmitz-Hübsch, Alexander U Brandt, John-Dylan Haynes, Friedemann Paul, Carsten Finke
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Abstract

Background: Functional connectome fingerprinting can identify individuals based on their functional connectome. Previous studies relied mostly on short intervals between fMRI acquisitions.

Objective: This cohort study aimed to determine the stability of connectome-based identification and their underlying signatures in patients with multiple sclerosis and healthy individuals with long follow-up intervals.

Methods: We acquired resting-state fMRI in 70 patients with multiple sclerosis and 273 healthy individuals with long follow-up times (up to 4 and 9 years, respectively). Using functional connectome fingerprinting, we examined the stability of the connectome and additionally investigated which regions, connections and networks supported individual identification. Finally, we predicted cognitive and behavioural outcome based on functional connectivity.

Results: Multiple sclerosis patients showed connectome stability and identification accuracies similar to healthy individuals, with longer time delays between imaging sessions being associated with accuracies dropping from 89% to 76%. Lesion load, brain atrophy or cognitive impairment did not affect identification accuracies within the range of disease severity studied. Connections from the fronto-parietal and default mode network were consistently most distinctive, i.e., informative of identity. The functional connectivity also allowed the prediction of individual cognitive performances.

Conclusion: Our results demonstrate that discriminatory signatures in the functional connectome are stable over extended periods of time in multiple sclerosis, resulting in similar identification accuracies and distinctive long-lasting functional connectome fingerprinting signatures in patients and healthy individuals.

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多发性硬化症的功能性连接体指纹和稳定性。
背景:功能连接体指纹可以根据个体的功能连接体来识别个体。以前的研究主要依赖于fMRI采集之间的短间隔。目的:本队列研究旨在通过长随访时间间隔确定多发性硬化症患者和健康个体中基于连接体识别及其潜在特征的稳定性。方法:我们对70例多发性硬化症患者和273名健康个体进行静息状态功能磁共振成像,随访时间长(分别为4年和9年)。使用功能性连接体指纹图谱,我们检查了连接体的稳定性,并进一步研究了哪些区域、连接和网络支持个体识别。最后,我们基于功能连通性预测认知和行为结果。结果:多发性硬化症患者表现出与健康个体相似的连接组稳定性和识别准确性,成像间隔时间较长与准确性相关,从89%下降到76%。在研究的疾病严重程度范围内,病变负荷、脑萎缩或认知障碍不影响识别的准确性。来自额顶叶网络和默认模式网络的连接始终是最独特的,即提供身份信息。功能连接也允许预测个人认知表现。结论:我们的研究结果表明,在多发性硬化症患者中,功能性连接组的鉴别特征在较长一段时间内是稳定的,从而在患者和健康个体中产生相似的识别准确性和独特的持久的功能性连接组指纹特征。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
0.00%
发文量
54
审稿时长
15 weeks
期刊最新文献
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