Quantitative susceptibility mapping of the motor cortex in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and primary lateral sclerosis.

TitleQuantitative susceptibility mapping of the motor cortex in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis and primary lateral sclerosis.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2015
AuthorsSchweitzer AD, Liu T, Gupta A, Zheng K, Seedial S, Shtilbans A, Shahbazi M, Lange D, Wang Y, A Tsiouris J
JournalAJR Am J Roentgenol
Volume204
Issue5
Pagination1086-92
Date Published2015 May
ISSN1546-3141
KeywordsAmyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis, Brain Mapping, Case-Control Studies, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Motor Cortex, Motor Neuron Disease, Retrospective Studies, Sensitivity and Specificity, Subtraction Technique
Abstract

OBJECTIVE: The diagnosis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and primary lateral sclerosis (PLS) is often difficult because of a lack of disease biomarkers. The purpose of this study was to investigate quantitative susceptibility mapping (QSM) of the motor cortex as a potential quantitative biomarker for the diagnosis of ALS and PLS.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: From a retrospective database, QSM images of 16 patients with upper motor neuron disease (nine men [56%], seven women; mean age, 56.3 years; 12 with ALS, four with PLS) and 23 control patients (13 men [56%], 10 women; mean age, 56.6 years) were reviewed. Two neuroradiologists, blinded to diagnosis, qualitatively assessed QSM, T2- and T2*-weighted, and T2-weighted FLAIR images. Relative motor cortex susceptibility was calculated by subtraction of adjacent white matter and CSF signal intensity from mean motor cortex susceptibility on the axial image most representative of the right- or left-hand lobule, and ROC analysis was performed. The Fisher exact and Student t tests were used to evaluate for statistical differences between the groups.

RESULTS: Qualitatively, QSM had greater diagnostic accuracy than T2-weighted, T2*-weighted, or T2-weighted FLAIR imaging for the diagnosis of ALS and PLS. Quantitatively, relative motor cortex susceptibility was found to be significantly greater in patients with motor neuron disease than in control patients (46.0 and 35.0 ppb; p < 0.001). ROC analysis showed an AUC of 0.88 (p < 0.0001) and an optimal cutoff value of 40.5 ppb for differentiating control patients from patients with ALS or PLS (sensitivity, 87.5%; specificity, 87.0%).

CONCLUSION: QSM is a sensitive and specific quantitative biomarker of iron deposition in the motor cortex in ALS and PLS.

DOI10.2214/AJR.14.13459
Alternate JournalAJR Am J Roentgenol
PubMed ID25905946
PubMed Central IDPMC4889122
Grant ListR01 NS072370 / NS / NINDS NIH HHS / United States
R01EB013443 / EB / NIBIB NIH HHS / United States
R01 EB013443 / EB / NIBIB NIH HHS / United States
R01BS072370 / BS / FDA HHS / United States
R43EB015293 / EB / NIBIB NIH HHS / United States
Related Institute: 
MRI Research Institute (MRIRI)

Weill Cornell Medicine
Department of Radiology
525 East 68th Street New York, NY 10065