Association of Network Connectivity via Resting State Functional MRI with Consciousness, Mortality, and Outcomes in Neonatal Acute Brain Injury

Author:

Boerwinkle Varina L.ORCID,Sussman BethanyORCID,Manjón Iliana,Mirea LuciaORCID,Suleman SaherORCID,Wyckoff Sarah N.ORCID,Bonnell Alexandra,Orgill Andrew,Tom Deborah

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAn accurate and comprehensive test of integrated brain network function is needed for neonates during the acute brain injury period to inform on morbidity. This retrospective cohort study aimed to assess whether integrated brain network function by resting state functional MRI, acquired during the acute period in neonates with brain injury, is associated with acute exam, neonatal mortality, and 5-month outcomes.MethodsThis study included 40 consecutive neonates with resting state functional MRI acquired 1-22 days after suspected brain insult from March 2018 to July 2019 at Phoenix Childrens Hospital. Acute period exam and test results were assigned ordinal scores based on severity as documented by respective treating specialists. Analyses (Fisher exact, Wilcoxon-rank sum test, ordinal/multinomial logistic regression) examined association of resting state networks with demographics, presentation, neurological exam, electroencephalogram, anatomical MRI, magnetic resonance spectroscopy, passive task functional MRI, and outcomes of discharge condition, outpatient development, motor tone, seizure, and mortality.ResultsSubjects had a mean (standard deviation) gestational age of 37.8 (2.6) weeks, a majority were male (63%), with diagnosis of hypoxic ischemic encephalopathy (68%). Other findings at birth included mild distress (48%), moderately abnormal neurological exam (33%), and consciousness characterized as awake but irritable (40%). Significant associations after multiple testing corrections were detected for resting state networks: basal ganglia with outpatient developmental delay (odds ratio [OR], 14.5; 99.4% confidence interval [CI], 2.00-105; P<.001) and motor tone/weakness (OR, 9.98; 99.4% CI, 1.72-57.9; P<.001); language/frontal-parietal network with discharge condition (OR, 5.13; 99.4% CI, 1.22-21.5; P=.002) and outpatient developmental delay (OR, 4.77; 99.4% CI, 1.21-18.7; P=.002); default mode network with discharge condition (OR, 3.72; 99.4% CI, 1.01-13.78; P=.006) and neurological exam (P=.002 (FE); OR, 11.8; 99.4% CI, 0.73-191; P=.01 (OLR)); seizure onset zone with motor tone/weakness (OR, 3.31; 99.4% CI, 1.08-10.1; P=.003). Resting state networks were not detected in only three neonates, who died prior to discharge.ConclusionsThis study provides level 3 evidence (OCEBM Levels of Evidence Working Group) that the degree of abnormality of resting state networks in neonatal acute brain injury is associated with acute exam and outcomes. Total lack of brain network detection was only found in patients who did not survive.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

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