PLoS ONE (Jan 2013)

Micro-structural brain alterations in aviremic HIV+ patients with minor neurocognitive disorders: a multi-contrast study at high field.

  • Cristina Granziera,
  • Alessandro Daducci,
  • Samanta Simioni,
  • Matthias Cavassini,
  • Alexis Roche,
  • Djalel Meskaldji,
  • Tobias Kober,
  • Melanie Metral,
  • Alexandra Calmy,
  • Gunther Helms,
  • Bernard Hirschel,
  • François Lazeyras,
  • Reto Meuli,
  • Gunnar Krueger,
  • Renaud A Du Pasquier

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0072547
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 9
p. e72547

Abstract

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Mild neurocognitive disorders (MND) affect a subset of HIV+ patients under effective combination antiretroviral therapy (cART). In this study, we used an innovative multi-contrast magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) approach at high-field to assess the presence of micro-structural brain alterations in MND+ patients.We enrolled 17 MND+ and 19 MND- patients with undetectable HIV-1 RNA and 19 healthy controls (HC). MRI acquisitions at 3T included: MP2RAGE for T1 relaxation times, Magnetization Transfer (MT), T2* and Susceptibility Weighted Imaging (SWI) to probe micro-structural integrity and iron deposition in the brain. Statistical analysis used permutation-based tests and correction for family-wise error rate. Multiple regression analysis was performed between MRI data and (i) neuropsychological results (ii) HIV infection characteristics. A linear discriminant analysis (LDA) based on MRI data was performed between MND+ and MND- patients and cross-validated with a leave-one-out test.Our data revealed loss of structural integrity and micro-oedema in MND+ compared to HC in the global white and cortical gray matter, as well as in the thalamus and basal ganglia. Multiple regression analysis showed a significant influence of sub-cortical nuclei alterations on the executive index of MND+ patients (p = 0.04 he and R² = 95.2). The LDA distinguished MND+ and MND- patients with a classification quality of 73% after cross-validation.Our study shows micro-structural brain tissue alterations in MND+ patients under effective therapy and suggests that multi-contrast MRI at high field is a powerful approach to discriminate between HIV+ patients on cART with and without mild neurocognitive deficits.