| Literature DB >> 22397707 |
Dana Horakova1, Tomas Kalincik, Jana Blahova Dusankova, Ondrej Dolezal.
Abstract
Traditionally, multiple sclerosis has been viewed as a disease predominantly affecting white matter. However, this view has lately been subject to numerous changes, as new evidence of anatomical and histological changes as well as of molecular targets within the grey matter has arisen. This advance was driven mainly by novel imaging techniques, however, these have not yet been implemented in routine clinical practice. The changes in the grey matter are related to physical and cognitive disability seen in individuals with multiple sclerosis. Furthermore, damage to several grey matter structures can be associated with impairment of specific functions. Therefore, we conclude that grey matter damage - global and regional - has the potential to become a marker of disease activity, complementary to the currently used magnetic resonance markers (global brain atrophy and T2 hyperintense lesions). Furthermore, it may improve the prediction of the future disease course and response to therapy in individual patients and may also become a reliable additional surrogate marker of treatment effect.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22397707 PMCID: PMC3311149 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2377-12-10
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Selected works studying grey matter changes and their relations to physical and cognitive impairment in MS
| Study | Patients | Follow-up | MRI | Main outcomes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dalton | 58 CIS | 3 | GMF | Decrease in GMF was higher in patients who converted to CDMS (-3.3%) than in those who did not (-1.1%). |
| Fisher | 7 CIS | 4 | BPF, GMF, | GMF decrease was more pronounced in patients compared to HC: |
| Fisniku | 29 CIS | 20/cross-sectional | GMF, GMV | GMF but not WMF correlated with EDSS (r = 0.48) and MSFC sub-scores (r = 0.59). |
| Horakova | 170 RRMS | 5 | GMV, PBVC | Decline in PBVC and GMV were the strongest MRI predictors of disability progression. |
| Calabrese | 48 PPMS | 2 | GMF, cortical lesions (volume, count) | Baseline volume of cortical lesions correlated with EDSS (r = 0.48) and its change over 2 years (r = 0.38). |
| Calabrese | 105 CIS | 4 | Regional atrophy | Atrophy of the superior frontal gyrus, thalamus, and cerebellum predicted independently conversion from CIS to CDMS. |
| Roosendaal | 95 CIS | cross-sectional | GMV | GMV was lower in SPMS than RRMS, and was the strongest independent predictor of physical disability and cognitive impairment. |
| Amato | 41 RRMS | cross-sectional | GMV | Cortical atrophy was found in cognitively impaired but not in cognitively preserved patients, and was correlated with a poorer performance on tests of verbal memory, attention, and verbal fluency. |
| Amato | 28 RR MS | 2.5 | GMV, NCV | Decrease in cortical volume was significantly higher in cognitively deteriorating than in stable or improving patients (-43 ml vs. -18 ml). |
| Tekok-Kilic | 59 CDMS | cross-sectional | GMF | Frontal atrophy was associated with impaired memory (auditory/verbal, visual episodic and working). |
| Houtchens | 62 RR MS | cross-sectional | thalamic volume | Thalamic volume was 17% lower in the MS group than in HC, and was associated with impaired cognitive performance (r = 0.51-0.72) and physical disability (r = 0.32). |
| Calabrese | 70 RR MS | cross-sectional | cortical lesions | Higher number and volume of cortical lesions and lower volume of neocortical grey matter were seen in cognitively impaired vs. cognitively preserved patients. |
BPF, brain parenchymal fraction; CDMS, clinically definite multiple sclerosis; CIS, clinically isolated syndrome; EDSS, Expanded Disability Status Scale; GMF, grey matter fraction; GMV, grey matter volume; HC, healthy controls; MS, multiple sclerosis; MSFC, Multiple Sclerosis Functional Composite; NCV, normalised cortical volume; PBVC, percentage brain volume change; RRMS, relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis; SPMS, secondary progressive multiple sclerosis; WMF, white matter fraction