TY - JOUR
T1 - The neurophysiological brain-fingerprint of Parkinson's disease
AU - PREVENT-AD Research Group
AU - Quebec Parkinson Network
AU - da Silva Castanheira, Jason
AU - Wiesman, Alex I.
AU - Hansen, Justine Y.
AU - Misic, Bratislav
AU - Baillet, Sylvain
AU - Breitner, John
AU - Poirier, Judes
AU - Bellec, Pierre
AU - Bohbot, Véronique
AU - Chakravarty, Mallar
AU - Collins, Louis
AU - Etienne, Pierre
AU - Evans, Alan
AU - Gauthier, Serge
AU - Hoge, Rick
AU - Ituria-Medina, Yasser
AU - Multhaup, Gerhard
AU - Münter, Lisa Marie
AU - Rajah, Natasha
AU - Rosa-Neto, Pedro
AU - Soucy, Jean Paul
AU - Vachon-Presseau, Etienne
AU - Villeneuve, Sylvia
AU - Amouyel, Philippe
AU - Appleby, Melissa
AU - Ashton, Nicholas
AU - Auld, Daniel
AU - Ayranci, Gülebru
AU - Bedetti, Christophe
AU - Beland, Marie Lise
AU - Blennow, Kaj
AU - Westman, Ann Brinkmalm
AU - Cuello, Claudio
AU - Dadar, Mahsa
AU - Daoust, Leslie Ann
AU - Das, Samir
AU - Dauar-Tedeschi, Marina
AU - De Beaumont, Louis
AU - Dea, Doris
AU - Descoteaux, Maxime
AU - Dufour, Marianne
AU - Farzin, Sarah
AU - Ferdinand, Fabiola
AU - Fonov, Vladimir
AU - Gonneaud, Julie
AU - Kat, Justin
AU - Kazazian, Christina
AU - Labonté, Anne
AU - Lafaille-Magnan, Marie Elyse
AU - Lalancette, Marc
AU - Lambert, Jean Charles
AU - Leoutsakos, Jeannie Marie
AU - Mahar, Laura
AU - Mathieu, Axel
AU - McSweeney, Melissa
AU - Meyer, Pierre François
AU - Miron, Justin
AU - Near, Jamie
AU - NewboldFox, Holly
AU - Nilsson, Nathalie
AU - Orban, Pierre
AU - Picard, Cynthia
AU - Binette, Alexa Pichet
AU - Poline, Jean Baptiste
AU - Rabipour, Sheida
AU - Salaciak, Alyssa
AU - Settimi, Matthew
AU - Subramaniapillai, Sivaniya
AU - Tam, Angela
AU - Tardif, Christine
AU - Théroux, Louise
AU - Tremblay-Mercier, Jennifer
AU - Tullo, Stephanie
AU - Ulku, Irem
AU - Vallée, Isabelle
AU - Zetterberg, Henrik
AU - Nair, Vasavan
AU - Pruessner, Jens
AU - Aisen, Paul
AU - Anthal, Elena
AU - Barkun, Alan
AU - Beaudry, Thomas
AU - Benbouhoud, Fatiha
AU - Brandt, Jason
AU - Carmo, Leopoldina
AU - Carrier, Charles Edouard
AU - Cheewakriengkrai, Laksanun
AU - Courcot, Blandine
AU - Couture, Doris
AU - Craft, Suzanne
AU - Dansereau, Christian
AU - Debacker, Clément
AU - Desautels, René
AU - Dubuc, Sylvie
AU - Duclair, Guerda
AU - Eisenberg, Mark
AU - El-Khoury, Rana
AU - Faubert, Anne Marie
AU - Fontaine, David
AU - Frappier, Josée
AU - Frenette, Joanne
AU - Gagné, Guylaine
AU - Gervais, Valérie
AU - Giles, Renuka
AU - Gordon, Renee
AU - Jack, Clifford
AU - Jutras, Benoit
AU - Khachaturian, Zaven
AU - Knopman, David
AU - Kostopoulos, Penelope
AU - Lapalme, Félix
AU - Lee, Tanya
AU - Lepage, Claude
AU - Leppert, Illana
AU - Madjar, Cécile
AU - Maillet, David
AU - Maltais, Jean Robert
AU - Mathotaarachchi, Sulantha
AU - Mayrand, Ginette
AU - Michaud, Diane
AU - Montine, Thomas
AU - Morris, John
AU - Pagé, Véronique
AU - Pascoal, Tharick
AU - Peillieux, Sandra
AU - Petkova, Mirela
AU - Pogossova, Galina
AU - Rioux, Pierre
AU - Sager, Mark
AU - Saint-Fort, Eunice Farah
AU - Savard, Mélissa
AU - Sperling, Reisa
AU - Tabrizi, Shirin
AU - Tariot, Pierre
AU - Teigner, Eduard
AU - Thomas, Ronald
AU - Toussaint, Paule Joanne
AU - Tuwaig, Miranda
AU - Venugopalan, Vinod
AU - Verfaillie, Sander
AU - Vogel, Jacob
AU - Wan, Karen
AU - Wang, Seqian
AU - Yu, Elsa
AU - Beaulieu-Boire, Isabelle
AU - Blanchet, Pierre
AU - Bogard, Sarah
AU - Bouchard, Manon
AU - Chouinard, Sylvain
AU - Cicchetti, Francesca
AU - Cloutier, Martin
AU - Dagher, Alain
AU - Degroot, Clotilde
AU - Desautels, Alex
AU - Dion, Marie Hélène
AU - Drouin-Ouellet, Janelle
AU - Dufresne, Anne Marie
AU - Dupré, Nicolas
AU - Duquette, Antoine
AU - Durcan, Thomas
AU - Fellows, Lesley K.
AU - Fon, Edward
AU - Gagnon, Jean François
AU - Gan-Or, Ziv
AU - Genge, Angela
AU - Jodoin, Nicolas
AU - Karamchandani, Jason
AU - Lafontaine, Anne Louise
AU - Langlois, Mélanie
AU - Leveille, Etienne
AU - Lévesque, Martin
AU - Melmed, Calvin
AU - Monchi, Oury
AU - Montplaisir, Jacques
AU - Panisset, Michel
AU - Parent, Martin
AU - Pham-An, Minh Thy
AU - Postuma, Ronald
AU - Pourcher, Emmanuelle
AU - Rao, Trisha
AU - Rivest, Jean
AU - Rouleau, Guy
AU - Sharp, Madeleine
AU - Soland, Valérie
AU - Sidel, Michael
AU - Wing Sun, Sonia Lai
AU - Thiel, Alexander
AU - Vitali, Paolo
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Author(s)
PY - 2024/7
Y1 - 2024/7
N2 - Background: Research in healthy young adults shows that characteristic patterns of brain activity define individual “brain-fingerprints” that are unique to each person. However, variability in these brain-fingerprints increases in individuals with neurological conditions, challenging the clinical relevance and potential impact of the approach. Our study shows that brain-fingerprints derived from neurophysiological brain activity are associated with pathophysiological and clinical traits of individual patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). Methods: We created brain-fingerprints from task-free brain activity recorded through magnetoencephalography in 79 PD patients and compared them with those from two independent samples of age-matched healthy controls (N = 424 total). We decomposed brain activity into arrhythmic and rhythmic components, defining distinct brain-fingerprints for each type from recording durations of up to 4 min and as short as 30 s. Findings: The arrhythmic spectral components of cortical activity in patients with Parkinson's disease are more variable over short periods, challenging the definition of a reliable brain-fingerprint. However, by isolating the rhythmic components of cortical activity, we derived brain-fingerprints that distinguished between patients and healthy controls with about 90% accuracy. The most prominent cortical features of the resulting Parkinson's brain-fingerprint are mapped to polyrhythmic activity in unimodal sensorimotor regions. Leveraging these features, we also demonstrate that Parkinson's symptom laterality can be decoded directly from cortical neurophysiological activity. Furthermore, our study reveals that the cortical topography of the Parkinson's brain-fingerprint aligns with that of neurotransmitter systems affected by the disease's pathophysiology. Interpretation: The increased moment-to-moment variability of arrhythmic brain-fingerprints challenges patient differentiation and explains previously published results. We outline patient-specific rhythmic brain signaling features that provide insights into both the neurophysiological signature and symptom laterality of Parkinson's disease. Thus, the proposed definition of a rhythmic brain-fingerprint of Parkinson's disease may contribute to novel, refined approaches to patient stratification. Symmetrically, we discuss how rhythmic brain-fingerprints may contribute to the improved identification and testing of therapeutic neurostimulation targets. Funding: Data collection and sharing for this project was provided by theQuebec Parkinson Network (QPN), thePre-symptomatic Evaluation of Novel or Experimental Treatments for Alzheimer's Disease (PREVENT-AD; release 6.0) program, theCambridge Centre for Aging Neuroscience (Cam-CAN), and theOpen MEG Archives (OMEGA). The QPN is funded by a grant from Fonds de Recherche du Québec - Santé (FRQS). PREVENT-AD was launched in 2011 as a $13.5 million, 7-year public-private partnership using funds provided by McGill University, the FRQS, an unrestricted research grant from Pfizer Canada, the Levesque Foundation, the Douglas Hospital Research Centre and Foundation, the Government of Canada, and the Canada Fund for Innovation. The Brainstorm project is supported by funding to SB from the NIH (R01-EB026299-05). Further funding to SB for this study included a Discovery grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada of Canada (436355-13), and the CIHR Canada research Chair in Neural Dynamics of Brain Systems (CRC-2017-00311).
AB - Background: Research in healthy young adults shows that characteristic patterns of brain activity define individual “brain-fingerprints” that are unique to each person. However, variability in these brain-fingerprints increases in individuals with neurological conditions, challenging the clinical relevance and potential impact of the approach. Our study shows that brain-fingerprints derived from neurophysiological brain activity are associated with pathophysiological and clinical traits of individual patients with Parkinson's disease (PD). Methods: We created brain-fingerprints from task-free brain activity recorded through magnetoencephalography in 79 PD patients and compared them with those from two independent samples of age-matched healthy controls (N = 424 total). We decomposed brain activity into arrhythmic and rhythmic components, defining distinct brain-fingerprints for each type from recording durations of up to 4 min and as short as 30 s. Findings: The arrhythmic spectral components of cortical activity in patients with Parkinson's disease are more variable over short periods, challenging the definition of a reliable brain-fingerprint. However, by isolating the rhythmic components of cortical activity, we derived brain-fingerprints that distinguished between patients and healthy controls with about 90% accuracy. The most prominent cortical features of the resulting Parkinson's brain-fingerprint are mapped to polyrhythmic activity in unimodal sensorimotor regions. Leveraging these features, we also demonstrate that Parkinson's symptom laterality can be decoded directly from cortical neurophysiological activity. Furthermore, our study reveals that the cortical topography of the Parkinson's brain-fingerprint aligns with that of neurotransmitter systems affected by the disease's pathophysiology. Interpretation: The increased moment-to-moment variability of arrhythmic brain-fingerprints challenges patient differentiation and explains previously published results. We outline patient-specific rhythmic brain signaling features that provide insights into both the neurophysiological signature and symptom laterality of Parkinson's disease. Thus, the proposed definition of a rhythmic brain-fingerprint of Parkinson's disease may contribute to novel, refined approaches to patient stratification. Symmetrically, we discuss how rhythmic brain-fingerprints may contribute to the improved identification and testing of therapeutic neurostimulation targets. Funding: Data collection and sharing for this project was provided by theQuebec Parkinson Network (QPN), thePre-symptomatic Evaluation of Novel or Experimental Treatments for Alzheimer's Disease (PREVENT-AD; release 6.0) program, theCambridge Centre for Aging Neuroscience (Cam-CAN), and theOpen MEG Archives (OMEGA). The QPN is funded by a grant from Fonds de Recherche du Québec - Santé (FRQS). PREVENT-AD was launched in 2011 as a $13.5 million, 7-year public-private partnership using funds provided by McGill University, the FRQS, an unrestricted research grant from Pfizer Canada, the Levesque Foundation, the Douglas Hospital Research Centre and Foundation, the Government of Canada, and the Canada Fund for Innovation. The Brainstorm project is supported by funding to SB from the NIH (R01-EB026299-05). Further funding to SB for this study included a Discovery grant from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada of Canada (436355-13), and the CIHR Canada research Chair in Neural Dynamics of Brain Systems (CRC-2017-00311).
KW - Arrhythmic brain activity
KW - Brain-fingerprinting
KW - Magnetoencephalography
KW - Movement disorders
KW - Neural dynamics
KW - Oscillations
KW - Parkinson's disease
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85196546016
U2 - 10.1016/j.ebiom.2024.105201
DO - 10.1016/j.ebiom.2024.105201
M3 - Article
C2 - 38908100
AN - SCOPUS:85196546016
SN - 2352-3964
VL - 105
JO - EBioMedicine
JF - EBioMedicine
M1 - 105201
ER -