Dynamics of corticocortical brain functional connectivity relevant to therapeutic response to biologics in inflammatory arthritis

Author:

Sakiyama Kodai1,Abe Nobuya1ORCID,Fujieda Yuichiro1ORCID,Tha Khin K23,Narita Hisashi4,Karino Kohei1,Kanda Masatoshi15,Kono Michihito1,Kato Masaru1,Atsumi Tatsuya1

Affiliation:

1. Hokkaido University Department of Rheumatology, Endocrinology and Nephrology, Faculty of Medicine and Graduate School of Medicine, , Sapporo 0608648 , Japan

2. Hokkaido University Hospital Department of Diagnostic and Interventional Radiology, , Sapporo 0608648 , Japan

3. Hokkaido University Global Centre for Biomedical Science and Engineering, Faculty of Medicine, , Sapporo 0608648 , Japan

4. Hokkaido University Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, , Sapporo 0608648 , Japan

5. Sapporo Medical University Department of Rheumatology and Clinical Immunology, School of Medicine, , Sapporo 0608556 , Japan

Abstract

Abstract Aberrant functional connectivity (FC) of the brain regions, evaluated by functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), affects clinical courses in inflammatory arthritis (IA). The static analysis methods would be simplistic to estimate the whole picture of resting-state brain function because blood oxygen level-dependent (BOLD) signals fluctuate over time. The effects of FC dynamics on clinical course are unknown in IA. Therefore, we aimed to evaluate dynamic FC for therapeutic responsiveness to biologics in IA patients. We analyzed resting-state fMRI data of 64 IA patients in 2 cohorts. Dynamic FC was derived as a correlation coefficient of the windowed BOLD signal time series. We determined representative whole-brain dynamic FC patterns by k-means++ cluster analysis, leading to 4 distinct clusters. In the first cohort, occurrence probability of the distinct cluster was associated with favorable therapeutic response in disease activity and patients’ global assessment, which was validated by the second cohort. The whole-brain FC of the distinct cluster indicated significantly increased corticocortical connectivity, and probabilistically decreased after therapy in treatment-effective patients compared with -ineffective patients. Taken together, frequent emergence of corticocortical connections was associated with clinical outcomes in IA. The coherence of corticocortical interactions might affect pain modulation, possibly relevant to therapeutic satisfaction.

Funder

Project of Junior Scientist Promotion in Hokkaido University

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Cognitive Neuroscience

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