TY - JOUR T1 - <em>In vivo</em> microstructural heterogeneity of white matter lesions in Alzheimer’s disease using tissue compositional analysis of diffusion MRI data JF - bioRxiv DO - 10.1101/623124 SP - 623124 AU - Remika Mito AU - Thijs Dhollander AU - Ying Xia AU - David Raffelt AU - Olivier Salvado AU - Leonid Churilov AU - Christopher C Rowe AU - Amy Brodtmann AU - Victor L Villemagne AU - Alan Connelly Y1 - 2019/01/01 UR - http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2019/05/03/623124.abstract N2 - White matter hyperintensities (WMH) are commonly observed in elderly individuals, and are typically more prevalent in Alzheimer’s disease subjects than in healthy subjects. These lesions can be identified on fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) MRI, on which they are hyperintense compared to their surroundings. These MRI-visible lesions appear homogeneously hyperintense despite known heterogeneity in their pathological underpinnings, and are commonly regarded as surrogate markers of small vessel disease in in vivo studies. Consequently, the extent to which these lesions contribute to Alzheimer’s disease remains unclear, likely due to the somewhat limited way in which these lesions are assessed in vivo. Diffusion MRI is sensitive to white matter microstructure, and might thus be used to investigate microstructural changes within WMH. In this study, we applied a method called single-shell 3-tissue constrained spherical deconvolution, which models white matter microstructure while also accounting for other tissue compartments, to investigate WMH in vivo. Diffusion MRI data and FLAIR images were obtained from Alzheimer’s disease (n = 48) and healthy elderly control (n = 94) subjects from the Australian Imaging, Biomarkers and Lifestyle study of ageing. WMH were automatically segmented and classified as periventricular or deep lesions from FLAIR images based on their continuity with the lateral ventricles, and the 3-tissue profile of different classes of WMH was characterised by three metrics, which together characterised the relative tissue profile in terms of the white matter-, grey matter-, and fluid-like characteristics of the diffusion signal. Our findings revealed that periventricular and deep lesion classes could be distinguished from one another, and from normal-appearing white matter based on their 3-tissue profile, with substantially higher free water content in periventricular lesions than deep. Given the higher lesion load of periventricular lesions in Alzheimer’s disease patients, the 3-tissue profile of these WMH could be interpreted as reflecting the more deleterious pathological underpinnings that are associated with disease. However, when alternatively classifying lesion sub-regions in terms of distance contours from the ventricles to account for potential heterogeneity within confluent lesions, we found that the highest fluid content was present in lesion areas most proximal to the ventricles, which were common to both Alzheimer’s disease subjects and healthy controls. We argue that whatever classification scheme is used when investigating WMH, failure to account for heterogeneity within lesions may result in classification-scheme dependent conclusions. Future studies of WMH in Alzheimer’s Disease would benefit from inclusion of microstructural information when characterising lesions.AIBLAustralian Imaging Biomarkers and Lifestyle study of ageingCSDConstrained spherical deconvolutionCSFcerebrospinal fluidDTIDiffusion tensor imagingDWIDiffusion-weighted imagingFLAIRFluid-attenuated inversion recoveryFODFibre orientation distributionGMgrey matterHISTHyperIntensity Segmentation ToolNAWMNormal-appearing white matterSS3T-CSDSingle-shell 3-tissue constrained spherical deconvolutionTCCerebrospinal fluid-like signal fractionTGGrey matter-like signal fractionTWWhite matter-like signal fractionWMwhite matterWMHWhite matter hyperintensities ER -