4.7 Article

Brain tissue microstructural and free-water composition 13 years after very preterm birth

Journal

NEUROIMAGE
Volume 254, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ACADEMIC PRESS INC ELSEVIER SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuroimage.2022.119168

Keywords

Preterm; Magnetic resonance imaging; Diffusion-weighted imaging; Microstructure

Funding

  1. Australian National Health and Medical Research Council [NHMRC] [237117, 491209, 1066555, 546519, 1060733, 1153176, 1176077, 1085754, 1141354]
  2. Australian Government Research Training Program (RTP) Scholarship
  3. Monash Graduate Excellence Scholarship
  4. Murdoch Children's Research Institute
  5. Royal Children's Hospital Foundation
  6. Department of Paediatrics at the University of Melbourne
  7. Victorian Government's Operational Infrastructure Support Program
  8. Royal Children's Hospital
  9. National Health and Medical Research Council of Australia [1066555] Funding Source: NHMRC

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The microstructure and free-water content of the brain in children born very preterm are associated with adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes, and these changes can persist up to thirteen years of age.
There have been many studies demonstrating children born very preterm exhibit brain white matter microstruc-tural alterations, which have been related to neurodevelopmental difficulties. These prior studies have often been based on diffusion MRI modelling and analysis techniques, which commonly focussed on white matter microstruc-tural properties in children born very preterm. However, there have been relatively fewer studies investigating the free-water content of the white matter, and also the microstructure and free-water content of the cortical grey matter, in children born very preterm. These biophysical properties of the brain change rapidly during fetal and neonatal brain development, and therefore such properties are likely also adversely affected by very preterm birth. In this study, we investigated the relationship of very preterm birth ( < 30 weeks' gestation) to both white matter and cortical grey matter microstructure and free-water content in childhood using advanced diffusion MRI analyses. A total of 130 very preterm participants and 45 full-term control participants underwent diffusion MRI at age 13 years. Diffusion tissue signal fractions derived by Single-Shell 3-Tissue Constrained Spherical Deconvolu-tion were used to investigate brain tissue microstructural and free-water composition. The tissue microstructural and free-water composition metrics were analysed using a voxel-based analysis and cortical region-of-interest analysis approach. Very preterm 13-year-olds exhibited reduced white matter microstructural density and in-creased free-water content across widespread regions of the white matter compared with controls. Additionally, very preterm 13-year-olds exhibited reduced microstructural density and increased free-water content in spe-cific temporal, frontal, occipital and cingulate cortical regions. These brain tissue composition alterations were strongly associated with cerebral white matter abnormalities identified in the neonatal period, and concurrent adverse cognitive and motor outcomes in very preterm children. The findings demonstrate brain microstructural and free-water alterations up to thirteen years from neonatal brain abnormalities in very preterm children that relate to adverse neurodevelopmental outcomes.

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