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Relevance of choroid plexus volumes in multiple sclerosis

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Item Type:Article
Title:Relevance of choroid plexus volumes in multiple sclerosis
Creators Name:Krieger, B., Bellenberg, B., Roenneke, A.K., Schneider, R., Ladopoulos, T., Abbas, Z., Rust, R., Schmitz-Hübsch, T., Chien, C., Gold, R., Paul, F. and Lukas, C.
Abstract:BACKGROUND: The choroid plexus (ChP) plays a pivotal role in inflammatory processes that occur in multiple sclerosis (MS). The enlargement of the ChP in relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) is considered to be an indication of disease activity and has been associated with periventricular remyelination failure. This cross-sectional study aimed to identify the relationship between ChP and periventricular tissue damage which occurs in MS, and to elucidate the role of neuroinflammation in primary progressive multiple sclerosis (PPMS). METHODS: ChP volume was assessed by a novel deep learning segmentation method based on structural MRI data acquired from two centers. In total, 141 RRMS and 64 PPMS patients were included, along with 75 healthy control subjects. In addition, T1w/FLAIR ratios were calculated within periventricular bands to quantify microstructural tissue damage and to assess its relationship to ChP volume. RESULTS: When compared to healthy controls, ChP volumes were significantly increased in RRMS, but not in patients with PPMS. T1w/FLAIR ratios in the normal appearing white matter (NAWM) showing periventricular gradients were decreased in patients with multiple sclerosis when compared to healthy control subjects and lower T1w/FLAIR ratios radiating out from the lateral ventricles were found in patients with PPMS. A relationship between ChP volume and T1w/FLAIR ratio in NAWM was found within the inner periventricular bands in RRMS patients. A longer duration of disease was associated with larger ChP volumes only in RRMS patients. Enlarged ChP volumes were also significantly associated with reduced cortex volumes and increased lesion volumes in RRMS. CONCLUSIONS: Our analysis confirmed that the ChP was significantly enlarged in patients with RRMS, which was related to brain lesion volumes and which suggested a dynamic development as it was associated with disease duration. Plexus enlargement was further associated with periventricular demyelination or tissue damage assessed by T1w/FLAIR ratios in RRMS. Furthermore, we did not find an enlargement of the ChP in patients with PPMS, possibly indicating the reduced involvement of inflammatory processes in the progressive phase of MS. The association between enlarged ChP volumes and cortical atrophy in RRMS highlighted the vulnerability of structures close to the CSF.
Keywords:Multiple sclerosis, MRI, Neuroinflammation, Choroid plexus
Source:Fluids and Barriers of the CNS
ISSN:2045-8118
Publisher:Biomed Central
Volume:22
Number:1
Page Range:47
Date:8 May 2025
Official Publication:https://doi.org/10.1186/s12987-025-00656-7
PubMed:View item in PubMed

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