Intrinsic brain functional connectivity predicts treatment-related motor complications in early Parkinson’s disease patients

Author:

De Micco Rosa,Di Nardo Federica,Siciliano Mattia,Silvestro Marcello,Russo Antonio,Cirillo Mario,Tedeschi Gioacchino,Esposito Fabrizio,Tessitore AlessandroORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Treatment-related motor complications may develop progressively over the course of Parkinson’s disease (PD). Objective We investigated intrinsic brain networks functional connectivity (FC) at baseline in a cohort of early PD patients which successively developed treatment-related motor complications over 4 years. Methods Baseline MRI images of 88 drug-naïve PD patients and 20 healthy controls were analyzed. After the baseline assessments, all PD patients were prescribed with dopaminergic treatment and yearly clinically re-assessed. At the 4-year follow-up, 36 patients have developed treatment-related motor complications (PD-Compl) whereas 52 had not (PD-no-Compl). Single-subject and group-level independent component analyses were used to investigate FC changes within the major large-scale resting-state networks at baseline. A multivariate Cox regression model was used to explore baseline predictors of treatment-related motor complications at 4-year follow-up. Results At baseline, an increased FC in the right middle frontal gyrus within the frontoparietal network as well as a decreased connectivity in the left cuneus within the default-mode network were detected in PD-Compl compared with PD-no-Compl. PD-Compl patients showed a preserved sensorimotor FC compared to controls. FC differences were found to be independent predictors of treatment-related motor complications over time. Conclusion Our findings demonstrated that specific FC differences may characterize drug-naïve PD patients more prone to develop treatment-related complications. These findings may reflect the presence of an intrinsic vulnerability across frontal and prefrontal circuits, which may be potentially targeted as a future biomarker in clinical trials.

Funder

Università degli Studi della Campania Luigi Vanvitelli

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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