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Title: Multiple sclerosis: improved identification of disease-relevant changes in gray and white matter by using susceptibility-based MR imaging. Author: Rudko DA, Solovey I, Gati JS, Kremenchutzky M, Menon RS. Journal: Radiology; 2014 Sep; 272(3):851-64. PubMed ID: 24828000. Abstract: PURPOSE: To evaluate the potential of quantitative susceptibility (QS) and R2* mapping as surrogate biomarkers of clinically relevant, age-adjusted demyelination and iron deposition in multiple sclerosis (MS). MATERIALS AND METHODS: All study participants gave written informed consent, and the study was approved by the institutional review board. Quantitative maps of the magnetic resonance imaging susceptibility parameters (R2* and QS) were computed for 25 patients with either clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) or relapsing-remitting MS, as well as for 15 age- and sex-matched control subjects imaged at 7 T. The candidate MR imaging biomarkers were correlated with Extended Disability Status Scale (EDSS), time since CIS diagnosis, time since MS diagnosis, and age. RESULTS: QS maps aided identification of significant, voxel-level increases in iron deposition in subcortical gray matter (GM) of patients with MS compared with control subjects. These voxel-level increases were not observed on R2* maps. Region-of-interest analysis of mean R2* and QS in subcortical GM demonstrated that R2* (R ≥ 0.39, P < .01) and QS (R ≥ 0.44, P < .01) were strongly correlated with EDSS. In white matter (WM), the volume of total WM damage (defined by a z score of less than -2.0 criterion, indicating demyelination) on QS maps correlated significantly with EDSS (R = 0.46, P = .02). Voxelwise QS also supported a significant contribution of age to demyelination in patients with MS, suggesting that age-adjusted clinical scores may provide more robust measures of MS disease severity compared with non-age-adjusted scores. CONCLUSION: Using QS and R2* mapping, evidence of both significant increases in iron deposition in subcortical GM and myelin degeneration along the WM skeleton of patients with MS was identified. Both effects correlated strongly with EDSS.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]