Affiliation:
1. Department of Neurology, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea
2. Department of Nuclear Medicine, Seoul National University Hospital, Seoul National University College of Medicine, Seoul, Korea
Abstract
Background: Rapid eye movement sleep behavior disorder (RBD) may precede or follow motor symptoms in Parkinson’s disease (PD). While over 70% of idiopathic RBD cases phenoconvert within a decade, a small subset develops PD after a more extended period or remains nonconverted. These heterogeneous manifestations of RBD in PD prompt subtype investigations. Premotor RBD may signify “body-first” PD with bottom-up, symmetric synucleinopathy propagation. Objective: Explore brainstem and nigrostriatal monoaminergic degeneration pattern differences based on premotor RBD presence and duration in de novo PD patients. Methods: In a cross-sectional analysis of de novo PD patients (n = 150) undergoing FP-CIT PET and RBD Single-Question Screen, the cohort was categorized into groups with and without premotor RBD (PDRBD +/–), with further classification of PDRBD + based on a 10-year duration of premotor RBD. Analysis of FP-CIT binding in the striatum and pons, striatal asymmetry, and striatum-to-pons ratios compared patterns of nigrostriatal and brainstem monoaminergic degeneration. Results: PDRBD + exhibited more severe and symmetrical striatal dopaminergic denervation compared to PDRBD–, with the difference in severity accentuated in the least-affected hemisphere. The PDRBD +<10Y subgroup displayed the most prominent striatal symmetry, supporting a more homogeneous “body-first” subtype. Pontine uptakes remained lower in PDRBD + even after adjusting for striatal uptake, suggesting early degeneration of pontine monoaminergic nuclei. Conclusions: Premotor RBD in PD is associated with severe, symmetrical nigrostriatal and brainstem monoaminergic degeneration, especially in cases with PD onset within 10 years of RBD. This supports the concept of a “widespread, bottom-up” pathophysiological mechanism associated with premotor RBD in PD.