Cerebrovascular Function in Sporadic and Genetic Cerebral Small Vessel Disease
Publication date
2025-03
Authors
Stringer, Michael S
Blair, Gordon W
Kopczak, Anna
Kerkhofs, Danielle
Thrippleton, Michael J
Chappell, Francesca M
Maniega, Susana Muñoz
Brown, Rosalind
Shuler, Kirsten
Hamilton, Iona
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Document Type
Article
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Abstract
Objective: Cerebral small vessel diseases (SVDs) are associated with cerebrovascular dysfunction, such as increased blood–brain barrier leakage (permeability surface area product), vascular pulsatility, and decreased cerebrovascular reactivity (CVR). No studies assessed all 3 functions concurrently. We assessed 3 key vascular functions in sporadic and genetic SVD to determine associations with SVD severity, subtype, and interrelations. Methods: In this prospective, cross-sectional, multicenter INVESTIGATE-SVDs study, we acquired brain magnetic resonance imaging in patients with sporadic SVD/cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL), including structural, quantitative microstructural, permeability surface area product, blood plasma volume fraction, vascular pulsatility, and CVR (in response to CO2) scans. We determined vascular function and white matter hyperintensity (WMH) associations, using covariate-adjusted linear regression; normal-appearing white matter and WMH differences, interrelationships between vascular functions, using linear mixed models; and major sources of variance using principal component analyses. Results: We recruited 77 patients (45 sporadic/32 CADASIL) at 3 sites. In adjusted analyses, patients with worse WMH had lower CVR (B = −1.78, 95% CI −3.30, −0.27) and blood plasma volume fraction (B = −0.594, 95% CI −0.987, −0.202). CVR was worse in WMH than normal-appearing white matter (eg, CVR: B = −0.048, 95% CI −0.079, −0.017). Adjusting for WMH severity, SVD subtype had minimal influence on vascular function (eg, CVR in CADASIL vs sporadic: B = 0.0169, 95% CI −0.0247, 0.0584). Different vascular function mechanisms were not generally interrelated (eg, permeability surface area product~CVR: B = −0.85, 95% CI −4.72, 3.02). Principal component analyses identified WMH volume/quantitative microstructural metrics explained most variance in CADASIL and arterial pulsatility in sporadic SVD, but similar main variance sources. Interpretation: Vascular function was worse with higher WMH, and in WMH than normal-appearing white matter. Sporadic SVD-CADASIL differences largely reflect disease severity. Limited vascular function interrelations may suggest disease stage-specific differences. ANN NEUROL 2025;97:483–498.
Keywords
Neurology, Clinical Neurology, Journal Article
Citation
Stringer, M S, Blair, G W, Kopczak, A, Kerkhofs, D, Thrippleton, M J, Chappell, F M, Maniega, S M, Brown, R, Shuler, K, Hamilton, I, Garcia, D J, Doubal, F N, Clancy, U, Sakka, E, Poliakova, T, Janssen, E, Duering, M, Ingrisch, M, Staals, J, Backes, W H, van Oostenbrugge, R, Biessels, G J, Dichgans, M, Wardlaw, J M & SVDs@target consortium 2025, 'Cerebrovascular Function in Sporadic and Genetic Cerebral Small Vessel Disease', Annals of Neurology, vol. 97, no. 3, pp. 483-498. https://doi.org/10.1002/ana.27136