Literature DB >> 33230532

Machine phenotyping of cluster headache and its response to verapamil.

Amy R Tso1, Mikael Brudfors2, Daisuke Danno3, Lou Grangeon3, Sanjay Cheema3, Manjit Matharu3, Parashkev Nachev1.   

Abstract

Cluster headache is characterized by recurrent, unilateral attacks of excruciating pain associated with ipsilateral cranial autonomic symptoms. Although a wide array of clinical, anatomical, physiological, and genetic data have informed multiple theories about the underlying pathophysiology, the lack of a comprehensive mechanistic understanding has inhibited, on the one hand, the development of new treatments and, on the other, the identification of features predictive of response to established ones. The first-line drug, verapamil, is found to be effective in only half of all patients, and after several weeks of dose escalation, rendering therapeutic selection both uncertain and slow. Here we use high-dimensional modelling of routinely acquired phenotypic and MRI data to quantify the predictability of verapamil responsiveness and to illuminate its neural dependants, across a cohort of 708 patients evaluated for cluster headache at the National Hospital for Neurology and Neurosurgery between 2007 and 2017. We derive a succinct latent representation of cluster headache from non-linear dimensionality reduction of structured clinical features, revealing novel phenotypic clusters. In a subset of patients, we show that individually predictive models based on gradient boosting machines can predict verapamil responsiveness from clinical (410 patients) and imaging (194 patients) features. Models combining clinical and imaging data establish the first benchmark for predicting verapamil responsiveness, with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.689 on cross-validation (95% confidence interval: 0.651 to 0.710) and 0.621 on held-out data. In the imaged patients, voxel-based morphometry revealed a grey matter cluster in lobule VI of the cerebellum (-4, -66, -20) exhibiting enhanced grey matter concentrations in verapamil non-responders compared with responders (familywise error-corrected P = 0.008, 29 voxels). We propose a mechanism for the therapeutic effect of verapamil that draws on the neuroanatomy and neurochemistry of the identified region. Our results reveal previously unrecognized high-dimensional structure within the phenotypic landscape of cluster headache that enables prediction of treatment response with modest fidelity. An analogous approach applied to larger, globally representative datasets could facilitate data-driven redefinition of diagnostic criteria and stronger, more generalizable predictive models of treatment responsiveness.
© The Author(s) (2020). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain.

Entities:  

Keywords:  brain imaging; cerebellum; cluster headache; representation learning; treatment outcome prediction

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33230532      PMCID: PMC7940170          DOI: 10.1093/brain/awaa388

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Brain        ISSN: 0006-8950            Impact factor:   13.501


  24 in total

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Review 2.  Representation learning: a review and new perspectives.

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3.  The organization of the human cerebellum estimated by intrinsic functional connectivity.

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Review 4.  Cluster headache.

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Journal:  Nat Rev Dis Primers       Date:  2018-03-01       Impact factor: 52.329

5.  Spatial and Temporal Organization of the Individual Human Cerebellum.

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6.  The anterior hypothalamus in cluster headache.

Authors:  Enrico B Arkink; Nicole Schmitz; Guus G Schoonman; Jorine A van Vliet; Joost Haan; Mark A van Buchem; Michel D Ferrari; Mark C Kruit
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Review 8.  Epidemiology and genetics of cluster headache.

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9.  Cross-trial prediction of treatment outcome in depression: a machine learning approach.

Authors:  Adam Mourad Chekroud; Ryan Joseph Zotti; Zarrar Shehzad; Ralitza Gueorguieva; Marcia K Johnson; Madhukar H Trivedi; Tyrone D Cannon; John Harrison Krystal; Philip Robert Corlett
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10.  Distinct and overlapping functional zones in the cerebellum defined by resting state functional connectivity.

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  1 in total

Review 1.  Pharmacogenetics in Primary Headache Disorders.

Authors:  Irina I Belyaeva; Anna G Subbotina; Ivan I Eremenko; Vadim V Tarasov; Vladimir N Chubarev; Helgi B Schiöth; Jessica Mwinyi
Journal:  Front Pharmacol       Date:  2022-02-10       Impact factor: 5.810

  1 in total

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