Baseline cerebral structural morphology predict freezing of gait in early drug-naïve Parkinson’s disease

Author:

Li Yuting,Huang Xiaofei,Ruan Xiuhang,Duan Dingna,Zhang Yihe,Yu Shaode,Chen Amei,Wang Zhaoxiu,Zou Yujian,Xia MingruiORCID,Wei XinhuaORCID

Abstract

AbstractFreezing of gait (FOG) greatly impacts the daily life of patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD). However, predictors of FOG in early PD are limited. Moreover, recent neuroimaging evidence of cerebral morphological alterations in PD is heterogeneous. We aimed to develop a model that could predict the occurrence of FOG using machine learning, collaborating with clinical, laboratory, and cerebral structural imaging information of early drug-naïve PD and investigate alterations in cerebral morphology in early PD. Data from 73 healthy controls (HCs) and 158 early drug-naïve PD patients at baseline were obtained from the Parkinson’s Progression Markers Initiative cohort. The CIVET pipeline was used to generate structural morphological features with T1-weighted imaging (T1WI). Five machine learning algorithms were calculated to assess the predictive performance of future FOG in early PD during a 5-year follow-up period. We found that models trained with structural morphological features showed fair to good performance (accuracy range, 0.67–0.73). Performance improved when clinical and laboratory data was added (accuracy range, 0.71–0.78). For machine learning algorithms, elastic net-support vector machine models (accuracy range, 0.69–0.78) performed the best. The main features used to predict FOG based on elastic net-support vector machine models were the structural morphological features that were mainly distributed in the left cerebrum. Moreover, the bilateral olfactory cortex (OLF) showed a significantly higher surface area in PD patients than in HCs. Overall, we found that T1WI morphometric markers helped predict future FOG occurrence in patients with early drug-naïve PD at the individual level. The OLF exhibits predominantly cortical expansion in early PD.

Funder

Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province

Guangzhou Municipal Science and Technology Project

Special Clinical Technology of Guangzhou

Science Foundation of Guangzhou First People’s Hospital

National Natural Science Foundation of China

China Postdoctoral Science Foundation

General guidance project of Health Science and technology in Guangzhou

Beijing Nova Program

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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