Publication:
MRI-ARSACS: an imaging index for autosomal recessive spastic ataxia of Charlevoix-Saguenay (ARSACS) identification based on the multicenter PROSPAX study

Placeholder

Organizational Units

Program

KU Authors

Co-Authors

Scaravilli, Alessandra
Negroni, Davide
Senatore, Claudio
Ugga, Lorenzo
Cosottini, Mirco
Ricca, Ivana
Bender, Benjamin
Traschuetz, Andreas
van de Warrenburg, Bart P.
Durr, Alexandra

Advisor

Publication Date

2024

Language

en

Type

Journal article

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Abstract

Background: Autosomal recessive spastic ataxia of Charlevoix-Saguenay (ARSACS) and hereditary spastic paraplegia type 7 (SPG7) represent the most common genotypes of spastic ataxia (SPAX). To date, their magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) features have only been described qualitatively, and a pure neuroradiological differential diagnosis between these two conditions is difficult to achieve. Objectives: To test the performance of MRI measures to discriminate between ARSACS and SPG7 (as an index of common SPAX disease). Methods: In this prospective multicenter study, 3D-T1-weighted images of 59 ARSACS (35.4 +/- 10.3 years, M/F = 33/26) and 78 SPG7 (54.8 +/- 10.3 years, M/F = 51/27) patients of the PROSPAX Consortium were analyzed, together with 30 controls (45.9 +/- 16.9 years, M/F = 15/15). Different linear and surface measures were evaluated. A receiver operating characteristic analysis was performed, calculating area under the curve (AUC) and corresponding diagnostic accuracy parameters. Results: The pons area proved to be the only metric increased exclusively in ARSACS patients (P = 0.02). Other different measures were reduced in ARSACS and SPG7 compared with controls (all with P <= 0.005). A cut-off value equal to 1.67 of the pons-to-superior vermis area ratio proved to have the highest AUC (0.98, diagnostic accuracy 93%, sensitivity 97%) in discriminating between ARSACS and SPG7. Conclusions: Evaluation of the pons-to-superior vermis area ratio can discriminate ARSACS from other SPAX patients, as exemplified here by SPG7. Hence, we hereby propose this ratio as the Magnetic Resonance Index for the Assessment and Recognition of patients harboring SACS mutations (MRI-ARSACS), a novel diagnostic tool able to identify ARSACS patients and useful for discriminating ARSACS from other SPAX patients undergoing MRI.

Description

Source:

Movement Disorders

Publisher:

Wiley

Keywords:

Subject

Clinical neurology

Citation

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Referenced By

Copy Rights Note

0

Views

0

Downloads

View PlumX Details