4.5 Article

Two distinct neuroanatomical subtypes of migraine without aura revealed by heterogeneity through discriminative analysis

Journal

BRAIN IMAGING AND BEHAVIOR
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s11682-023-00802-5

Keywords

Migraine; Magnetic resonance imaging; Gray matter volume; Heterogeneity; Subtypes of migraine; Semi-supervised machine learning

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This study used a new method based on gray matter volumes (GMVs) to investigate the neuroanatomical subtypes of migraine. The results showed that migraine patients without aura have high interindividual variability in GMVs, and two distinct and reproducible neuroanatomical subtypes of migraine were revealed.
The neurobiological heterogeneity in migraine is poorly studied, resulting in conflicting neuroimaging findings. This study used a newly proposed method based on gray matter volumes (GMVs) to investigate objective neuroanatomical subtypes of migraine. Structural MRI and clinical measures of 31 migraine patients without aura and 33 matched healthy controls (HCs) were explored. Firstly, we investigated whether migraine patients exhibited higher interindividual variability than HCs in terms of GMVs. Then, heterogeneity through discriminative analysis (HYDRA) was applied to categorize migraine patients into distinct subtypes by regional volumetric measures of GMVs. Voxel-wise volume and clinical characteristics among different subtypes were also explored. Migraine patients without aura exhibited higher interindividual GMVs variability. Two distinct and reproducible neuroanatomical subtypes of migraine were revealed. These two subtypes exhibited opposite neuroanatomical aberrances compared to HCs. Subtype 1 showed widespread decreased GMVs, while Subtype 2 showed increased GMVs in limited regions. The total intracranial volume was significantly positively correlated with cognitive function in Subtype 2. Subtype 1 showed significantly longer illness duration and less cognitive scores compared to Subtype 2. The present study shows that migraine patients without aura have high structural heterogeneity and uncovers two distinct and robust neuroanatomical subtypes, which provide a possible explanation for conflicting neuroimaging findings.

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