Presence but not the timing of onset of REM sleep behavior disorder distinguishes evolution patterns in Parkinson's disease.

Sijia Tan,Cheng Zhou,Ji-Rong Wen,Xiaojie Duanmu,Tao Guo,Haoting Wu,Jingjing Wu,Zhen-zhen Cao,Xiaocao Liu,Jingwen Chen,Chenqing Wu,J. Qin,Jingjing Xu,Lu-yan Gu,Yaping Yan,Baorong Zhang,Min-min Zhang,Xiaojun Guan,Xiaojun Xu

Published 2023 in Neurobiology of Disease

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND Rapid eye movement (REM) sleep behavior disorder (RBD) could develop preceding or come after motor symptoms during Parkinson's disease (PD). It remains unknown that whether PD with different timing of RBD onset relative to motor symptoms suggests different spatiotemporal sequences of neurodegeneration. This study aimed to explore the sequence of disease progression in crucially involved brain regions in PD with different timing of RBD onset. METHOD We recruited 157 PD, 16 isolated RBD (iRBD), and 78 healthy controls. PD patients were identified as (1) PD with RBD preceding motor symptoms (PD-preRBD, n = 50), (2) PD with RBD posterior to motor symptoms (PD-postRBD, n = 31), (3) PD without RBD (PD-nonRBD, n = 75). The volumes of crucial brain regions, including the basal ganglia and limbic structures in T1-weighted imaging, and the contrast-noise-ratios of locus coeruleus (LC) and substantia nigra (SN) in neuromelanin-sensitive magnetic resonance imaging were extracted. To simulate the sequence of disease progression for cross-sectional data, an event-based model was introduced to estimate the maximum likelihood sequence of regions' involvement for each group. Then, a statistical parameter, the Bhattacharya coefficient (BC), was used to evaluate the similarity of the sequence. RESULTS The model predicted that SN occupied the highest likelihood in the maximum likelihood sequence of disease progression in the all PD subgroups, while LC was specifically positioned earlier to SN in iRBD, a prodromal phase of PD. Subsequent early involvement of LC was observed in the both PD-preRBD and PD-postRBD. In contrast, atrophy in the para-hippocampal gyrus but relatively intact LC in the early stage was demonstrated in PD-nonRBD. Then, the similarity comparisons indicated higher BC between PD-postRBD and PD-preRBD (BC = 0.76) but lower BC between PD-postRBD and PD-nonRBD group (BC = 0.41). iRBD had higher BC against PD-preRBD (BC = 0.66) and PD-postRBD (BC = 0.63) but lower BC against PD- nonRBD (BC = 0.48). CONCLUSION The spatiotemporal sequences of neurodegeneration between PD-pre and PD-post were similar but distinct from PD-nonRBD. The presence of RBD may be the essential factor for differentiating the degeneration patterns of PD, but the timing of RBD onset has currently proved to be not.

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