Consensus Recommendations to Establish Reporting Standards in fMRI of Migraine: A Delphi Study.

IF 7.7 1区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Neurology Pub Date : 2025-03-11 Epub Date: 2025-02-10 DOI:10.1212/WNL.0000000000210235
Severin Schramm, Corinna Börner-Schröder, Miriam Reichert, Constanze Ramschütz, Xiao Michelle Androulakis, Messoud Ashina, Gianluca Coppola, Brett Cucchiara, Zhao Dong, Xiaoxia Du, Laura H Fischer-Schulte, Peter J Goadsby, Rune Häckert Christensen, Luke A Henderson, Anders Hougaard, Jian-Ren Liu, Gabriella Juhasz, Nazia Karsan, Jian Kong, Jeungchan Lee, Mi Ji Lee, Clas Linnman, Vani Mathur, Arne May, Jan Mehnert, Eric Moulton, David M Niddam, Jean Schoenen, David A Seminowicz, Anne Stankewitz, Yiheng Tu, Dániel Veréb, Tao Yin, Claus Zimmer, Florian Heinen, Thomas Baum, Michaela V Bonfert, Nico Sollmann
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Abstract

Background and objectives: Migraine is a multifaceted primary headache disorder. In neuroimaging of migraine, fMRI has been used to elucidate pathophysiology or monitor treatment effects. The current literature, however, is highly heterogeneous regarding reported variables and methodologies. This begets a lack of comparability and complicates synthesis of results across studies. We developed a framework for standardized reporting of fMRI studies in migraine.

Methods: Experts on fMRI in migraine were identified from the literature and subjected to structured questionnaires in 2 iterations of 3 rounds according to the DELPHI method. A total of 157 statements across 17 reporting domains were rated on 5-point Likert scales (strong support to strong opposition). The first iteration covered demographic data, migraine-specific factors, medication, scan timing, healthy controls (HCs), participant sampling/recruiting, standardized forms, study preregistration, region of interest (ROI) analyses, validation data sets, data sharing, preprocessing documentation, and analysis software. The second iteration of the questionnaire covered scanner-related factors, sequence-related factors, physiology monitoring, and stimulation-related factors. Items showing strong consensus/consensus (≥90%/≥75% of participants indicating scores 4 or 5) were included as standard reporting items.

Results: All 3 rounds of the first/second iteration were completed by 29 and 26 researchers (age 46 ± 11 years; 38% female/age 46 ± 12 years; 44% female) from 23 and 21 institutions. Across both iterations, strong consensus and consensus was achieved for 34 (3 scanner-related factors, 9 sequence-related factors, 1 stimulation-related factor, 2 demographic factors, 7 migraine-specific factors, 2 medication-factors, 2 scan timing factors, 4 HC factors, 1 preregistration factor, 1 analysis software factor, and 2 ROI analyses factors) and 33 (1 scanner-related factors, 4 sequence related factors, 1 factor related to physiology monitoring, 1 stimulation-related factor, 3 demographic factors, 6 migraine-specific factors, 4 medication factors, 3 HC factors, 2 sampling factors, 1 standardized form, 1 preregistration factor, 1 data sharing factor, 2 analysis software factors, and 3 ROI analyses factors) items, respectively. From these, a checklist covering 63 items from 14 reporting domains was created.

Discussion: We present an expert-based framework for reporting standards in fMRI studies of migraine, which can be used for future studies to homogenize cohort characterization, fMRI acquisitions, and analysis protocols.

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来源期刊
Neurology
Neurology 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
12.20
自引率
4.00%
发文量
1973
审稿时长
2-3 weeks
期刊介绍: Neurology, the official journal of the American Academy of Neurology, aspires to be the premier peer-reviewed journal for clinical neurology research. Its mission is to publish exceptional peer-reviewed original research articles, editorials, and reviews to improve patient care, education, clinical research, and professionalism in neurology. As the leading clinical neurology journal worldwide, Neurology targets physicians specializing in nervous system diseases and conditions. It aims to advance the field by presenting new basic and clinical research that influences neurological practice. The journal is a leading source of cutting-edge, peer-reviewed information for the neurology community worldwide. Editorial content includes Research, Clinical/Scientific Notes, Views, Historical Neurology, NeuroImages, Humanities, Letters, and position papers from the American Academy of Neurology. The online version is considered the definitive version, encompassing all available content. Neurology is indexed in prestigious databases such as MEDLINE/PubMed, Embase, Scopus, Biological Abstracts®, PsycINFO®, Current Contents®, Web of Science®, CrossRef, and Google Scholar.
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