| Literature DB >> 28424652 |
Michael K Leuchter1, Elissa J Donzis1,2,3, Carlos Cepeda1,2,3, Aimee M Hunter1,3,4, Ana María Estrada-Sánchez1,2,3, Ian A Cook1,3,4,5, Michael S Levine1,2,3, Andrew F Leuchter1,3,4.
Abstract
A major focus in development of novel therapies for Huntington's disease (HD) is identification of treatments that reduce the burden of mutant huntingtin (mHTT) protein in the brain. In order to identify and test the efficacy of such therapies, it is essential to have biomarkers that are sensitive to the effects of mHTT on brain function to determine whether the intervention has been effective at preventing toxicity in target brain systems before onset of clinical symptoms. Ideally, such biomarkers should have a plausible physiologic basis for detecting the effects of mHTT, be measureable both in preclinical models and human studies, be practical to measure serially in clinical trials, and be reliably measurable in HD gene expansion carriers (HDGECs), among other features. Quantitative electroencephalography (qEEG) fulfills many of these basic criteria of a "fit-for-purpose" biomarker. qEEG measures brain oscillatory activity that is regulated by the brain structures that are affected by mHTT in premanifest and early symptom individuals. The technology is practical to implement in the laboratory and is well tolerated by humans in clinical trials. The biomarkers are measureable across animal models and humans, with findings that appear to be detectable in HDGECs and translate across species. We review here the literature on recent developments in both preclinical and human studies of the use of qEEG biomarkers in HD, and the evidence for their usefulness as biomarkers to help guide development of novel mHTT lowering treatments.Entities:
Keywords: Huntington’s disease; biomarkers; electrophysiology; human; huntingtin aggregates; mouse; mutant huntingtin; quantitative electroencephalography
Year: 2017 PMID: 28424652 PMCID: PMC5371600 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2017.00091
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.003
Literature review results for qEEG biomarkers in rodents.
| Reference | Year | Rodent strain(s) | Recording site | Measure | Electrophysiological finding(s) | Behavioral correlation(s) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kantor et al. ( | 2016 | R6/2 mice | Dural screws | qEEG | Gamma absolute power was higher in R6/2 mice during REM and suppressed upon administration of zolpidem or amitriptyline ( | Sleep/wake abnormalities were corrected in a dose-dependent manner and correlated with qEEG corrections |
| Absolute delta power was increased by zolpidem in wild-type (WT) mice, not in R6/2, during REM ( | ||||||
| 1–5 Hz (delta/alpha) and 3–7 Hz (delta/alpha/theta) absolute powers were decreased by amitriptyline in WT and R6/2, respectively ( | ||||||
| Fisher et al. ( | 2016 | zQ175 mice | Dural screws | qEEG | Absolute delta power lower in Het and Hom zQ175 relative to WT ( | Sleep/wake amount and body temperature regulation disrupted in Hom, qEEG markers were observed prior to disruptions. No differences observed between Het and WT, though qEEG differences observed in Het were observed prior to previously reported motor disturbances |
| Absolute beta and gamma power higher in Het and Hom zQ175 relative to WT ( | ||||||
| Peak theta frequency was lower in Het and Hom zQ175 relative to WT ( | ||||||
| Callahan and Abercrombie ( | 2015 | R6/2 mice | Cortex | ECoG and local field potentials (LFPs) (of STN) | Absolute delta and theta power lower in R6/2 mice relative to WT ( | None |
| Absolute beta ( | ||||||
| Nagy et al. ( | 2015 | zQ175 mice and BACHD rats | Hippocampus | LFP | Absolute gamma power higher in Hom zQ175 relative to WT ( | None |
| Absolute gamma power lower in BACHD rats relative to WT ( | ||||||
| PDE9A inhibitor lowered WT rat absolute gamma power to BACHD levels ( | ||||||
| PDE9A inhibitor had no effect on zQ175 relative to WT ( | ||||||
| Kantor et al. ( | 2013 | R6/2 mice | Dural screws | qEEG | Absolute delta power lower in R6/2 mice in frontoparietal and frontal regions relative to WT ( | EEG markers were detected prior to any symptoms |
| Absolute theta and delta power lower in R6/2 mice in frontal region relative to WT ( | ||||||
| Absolute gamma power higher in R6/2 mice relative to WT ( | ||||||
| Peak theta frequency shifted from 7 to 6 Hz in R6/2 mice relative to WT ( | ||||||
| Fisher et al. ( | 2013 | R6/2 mice | Dural screws | qEEG | High-frequency beta and gamma (25–60 Hz) absolute power higher in R6/2 during wake relative to WT ( | Circadian rhythm disturbances were found (body temperature, sleep/wake disturbances) in R6/2 mice relative to WT, but EEG abnormalities were detected earlier |
| Absolute delta and theta power lower in R6/2 during NREM relative to WT ( | ||||||
| Miller et al. ( | 2011 | R6/2 mice | Striatum | LFP | Delta and theta relative power lower in R6/2 relative to WT ( | None |
| Gamma relative power higher in R6/2 relative to WT ( | ||||||
Base search terms included (EEG OR EEG Mapping OR qEEG) AND (Huntington’s Disease OR Huntington’s OR Huntington OR Huntington Disease). Additional terms included biomarker, preclinical, power spectral analysis, neural networks, low-resolution electromagnetic tomography (LORETA) (Mouse OR Mice) AND (R6/2 OR zQ175), and rat. Results were restricted to rodents. Information noted includes total number of species examined, the electrode recording site and recording measure used, any relevant qEEG-related findings, and correlations of those findings to behavioral and genetic measures.
Literature review results for qEEG biomarkers in humans.
| Reference | Year | Measure | Subjects | Control | Pre-HD | HD | Electrophysiological Finding(s) | Clinical correlation(s) | CAG-repeat correlation | Other |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lazar et al. ( | 2015 | EEG-PSG | 82 | 36 | 38 | 8 | 5–7 Hz range (theta and alpha–theta border) relative power lower in pre-HD and early HD during REM relative to controls ( | Relative power in 5–7 Hz range in HD during REM negatively correlated with disease burden score (DBS) | None | |
| 6–7 Hz range (theta and alpha–theta border) relative power lower in pre-HD and early HD during NREM relative to controls ( | ||||||||||
| Piano et al. ( | 2015 | LORETA | 46 | 23 | 0 | 23 | Alpha power higher in HD during NREM relative to control ( | Delta LORETA power negatively correlated with Unified Huntington’s Disease Rating Scale (UHDRS) during wake | None | Includes a literature review table that goes back further than the one in this review |
| Alpha power lower in HD during REM relative to control ( | ||||||||||
| Beta power lower in HD during NREM relative to control ( | Alpha, beta, and theta LORETA power positively correlated with UHDRS during NREM | |||||||||
| Theta power lower in HD during NREM and REM relative to control ( | ||||||||||
| Delta power higher in HD during wake relative to control ( | ||||||||||
| Ponomareva et al. ( | 2014 | qEEG | 58 | 29 | 29 | 0 | 8–9 Hz range (alpha) relative power lower in pre-HD relative to control ( | Alpha, theta, and delta relative power positively correlated with DBS in pre-HD | CAG repeat length positively correlated with delta and theta relative power, 4–5 and 5–6 Hz bin relative power | |
| 7–8 Hz range (alpha–theta border) relative power lower in pre-HD relative to control ( | Extreme positive correlation between the difference of relative power between 7–8 and 4–5 Hz bin and DBS | Negatively correlated with alpha relative power, 7–8, 9–10, and 10–11 Hz bin relative power | ||||||||
| Delta and theta relative power negatively correlated with FAS score | ||||||||||
| Alpha relative power positively correlated with FAS score | ||||||||||
| Extreme positive correlation between the difference of relative power between 7–8 and 4–5 Hz bin and FAS score | ||||||||||
| Painold et al. ( | 2011 | LORETA | 110 | 55 | 0 | 55 | Alpha LORETA power lower in HD relative to control ( | Alpha LORETA power positively correlated with Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE) score | None | Delta power observations were primarily in later stages of HD |
| Beta LORETA power lower in HD relative to control ( | ||||||||||
| Theta LORETA power lower in HD relative to control ( | Theta and alpha LORETA power negatively correlated with UHDRS | |||||||||
| Delta LORETA power higher in HD relative to control ( | ||||||||||
| Painold et al. ( | 2010 | EEG Mapping | 110 | 55 | 0 | 55 | Absolute alpha power lower in HD relative to control ( | Absolute alpha power positively correlated with MMSE score and negatively with UHDRS | None | |
| Absolute beta power lower in HD relative to control ( | Absolute beta power positively correlated with MMSE and UHDRS scores | |||||||||
| Absolute theta power higher in HD relative to control ( | Absolute delta power positively correlated with MMSE score and negatively with UHDRS | |||||||||
| Absolute delta power higher in HD relative to control ( | Absolute theta power negatively correlated with MMSE and UHDRS scores | |||||||||
| Hunter et al. ( | 2010 | qEEG | 42 | 15 | 3 | 24 | Absolute delta power higher in HD relative to control ( | Absolute alpha power negatively correlated with MMSE, digit symbol, and Stroop reading scores | Relative delta power AP gradient negatively correlated with CAG-repeat length | Absolute alpha power increase was only significant when medicated patients were included in analysis |
| Relative alpha anterior–posterior (AP)-gradient lower in HD relative to control ( | Relative alpha AP-gradient positively correlated with Burden Pathology Score (BPS) score and negatively with Total Functional Capacity (TFC) and Stroop reading scores | |||||||||
| Relative delta AP-gradient lower in HD relative to control ( | Relative delta AP-gradient positively correlated with TFC score and negatively with BPS and Total Motor Symptoms scores | |||||||||
| Van der Hiele et al. ( | 2007 | qEEG | 29 | 13 | 16 | 0 | Relative alpha power lower in Pre-HD relative to control ( | None | None | |
| Absolute alpha power lower in Pre-HD relative to control ( | ||||||||||
| Theta power unchanged in Pre-HD relative to control ( | ||||||||||
| De Tommaso et al. ( | 2003 | qEEG | 33 | 13 | 7 | 13 | Absolute alpha power lower in HD relative to control (significance not reported) | None | None | No conclusions made regarding Pre-HD |
| Absolute theta power higher in HD relative to control (significance not reported) | ||||||||||
| Absolute delta power higher in HD relative to control (significance not reported) | ||||||||||
Base search terms included (EEG OR EEG Mapping OR qEEG) AND (Huntington’s Disease OR Huntington’s OR Huntington OR Huntington Disease). Additional terms included biomarker, preclinical, power spectral analysis, neural networks, and LORETA. Results were restricted to humans. Information noted includes recording modality used, the total number of subjects, the number of Huntington’s Disease (HD) subjects, the number of HDGEC/pre-HD subjects, the number of control subjects, any relevant qEEG-related findings, and correlations of those findings to clinical and genetic measures.