Structural connectivity mediates the relationship between blood oxygenation and cognitive function in sickle cell anemia

Author:

Clayden Jonathan D1ORCID,Stotesbury Hanne2ORCID,Kawadler Jamie M2ORCID,Slee April3ORCID,Koelbel Melanie2,Saunders Dawn E2,Hood Anna M4ORCID,Wilkey Olu5,Layton Mark6,Inusa Baba PD7ORCID,Pelidis Maria8,Chakravorty Subarna9ORCID,Rees David C10,Howard Jo11ORCID,Awogbade Moji12,Liossi Christina13ORCID,Kirkham Fenella J14ORCID,Clark Chris A2

Affiliation:

1. University College London, London, United Kingdom

2. UCL Great Ormond Street Institute of Child Health, London, United Kingdom

3. Axio research LLC, United States

4. University of Manchester, United Kingdom

5. North Middlesex Hospital, London, United Kingdom

6. Imperial College Healthcare NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom

7. Guy's and St Thomas' Hospital, London, United Kingdom

8. Evelina London Children's hospital, London, United Kingdom

9. King's College Hospital, London, United Kingdom

10. King's College London, London, Alaska, United Kingdom

11. Guy's and St Thomas' NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom

12. Kings College Hospital NHS Trust, London, United Kingdom

13. Great Ormond Street hospital, United Kingdom

14. Clinical and Experimental Sciences, University of Southampton, United Kingdom

Abstract

In sickle cell disease (SCD), the relative importance of reduced hemoglobin and peripheral oxygen saturation (SpO2) on brain structure remains uncertain. We applied graph-theoretical analysis to diffusion MRI data to investigate the effect of structural brain connectivity on cognitive function, alongside presence/absence, number and volume of silent cerebral infarction (SCI). In patients, we investigated the relationships between network properties, blood oxygenation and cognition (working memory, WMI, and processing speed, PSI, indices). Based on streamline counts and fractional anisotropy (FA), we identified a subnetwork with weakened connectivity in 92 SCA patients (49 males; 8.0-38.8 years), compared to 54 non-SCA controls (22 males; 6.7-30.6 years). Multiple regression analyses showed a significant effect of hemoglobin on full-network edge density (p<0.05), and of peripheral SpO2 on streamline-weighted subnetwork efficiency (p<0.01). There were effects of FA-weighted full-network and subnetwork efficiency on WMI (both p<0.05), and of streamline-weighted subnetwork efficiency on PSI (p=0.05) but no effects on SCI. Streamline-weighted efficiency was progressively lower with lower SpO2, with a downstream effect on PSI. In path analysis, indirect relationships between blood oxygenation and cognition, mediated by network properties, were better supported than direct alternatives, with an indirect relationship between low SpO2 and PSI in patients, mediated by structural connectivity efficiency in a subnetwork of the brain differing from controls. Our findings are consistent with the notion that cognitive impairment is primarily mediated by hypoxic-ischemic effects on normal-appearing white matter, and highlight the utility of network-based methods in providing biomarkers of cognitive dysfunction in SCA patients.

Publisher

American Society of Hematology

Subject

Hematology

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