4.6 Article

Structural MRI profiles and tau correlates of atrophy in autopsy-confirmed CTE

Journal

ALZHEIMERS RESEARCH & THERAPY
Volume 13, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/s13195-021-00928-y

Keywords

Atrophy; Chronic traumatic encephalopathy; Magnetic resonance imaging; Neurodegeneration; Tau

Funding

  1. NIA [AG057902, AG06234, RF1AG054156, K23AG046377, AG008122, AG016495, AG033040, AG054156, AG049810, AG062109, P30AG072978]
  2. NINDS [U54NS115266, U01NS086659, K23NS102399]
  3. National Institute of Aging Boston University AD Center [P30AG072978]
  4. Department of Veterans Affairs Merit Award [I01-CX001038]
  5. Lynn Buoniconti Foundation
  6. BU-CTSI [1UL1TR001430]
  7. Alzheimer's Association [AARF-17-529888]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

The study characterized the macrostructural MRI features of brain donors with autopsy-confirmed CTE, finding frontal-temporal atrophy as a prominent MRI feature of CTE and showing the association between p-tau accumulation and atrophy in CTE.
Background Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE), a neurodegenerative tauopathy, cannot currently be diagnosed during life. Atrophy patterns on magnetic resonance imaging could be an effective in vivo biomarker of CTE, but have not been characterized. Mechanisms of neurodegeneration in CTE are unknown. Here, we characterized macrostructural magnetic resonance imaging features of brain donors with autopsy-confirmed CTE. The association between hyperphosphorylated tau (p-tau) and atrophy on magnetic resonance imaging was examined. Methods Magnetic resonance imaging scans were obtained by medical record requests for 55 deceased symptomatic men with autopsy-confirmed CTE and 31 men (n = 11 deceased) with normal cognition at the time of the scan, all >60 years Three neuroradiologists visually rated regional atrophy and microvascular disease (0 [none]-4 [severe]), microbleeds, and cavum septum pellucidum presence. Neuropathologists rated tau severity and atrophy at autopsy using semi-quantitative scales. Results Compared to unimpaired males, donors with CTE (45/55=stage III/IV) had greater atrophy of the orbital-frontal (mean diff.=1.29), dorsolateral frontal (mean diff.=1.31), superior frontal (mean diff.=1.05), anterior temporal (mean diff.=1.57), and medial temporal lobes (mean diff.=1.60), and larger lateral (mean diff.=1.72) and third (mean diff.=0.80) ventricles, controlling for age at scan (ps<0.05). There were no effects for posterior atrophy or microvascular disease. Donors with CTE had increased odds of a cavum septum pellucidum (OR = 6.7, p < 0.05). Among donors with CTE, greater tau severity across 14 regions corresponded to greater atrophy on magnetic resonance imaging (beta = 0.68, p < 0.01). Conclusions These findings support frontal-temporal atrophy as a magnetic resonance imaging finding of CTE and show p-tau accumulation is associated with atrophy in CTE.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available