Punctate White Matter Lesions Associated With Altered Brain Development And Adverse Motor Outcome In Preterm Infants

Nora Tusor, Manon J Benders, Serena J. Counsell, Phumza Nongena, Moegamad A Ederies, Shona Falconer, Andrew T M Chew, Nuria Gonzalez-Cinca, Joseph V Hajnal, Sunay Gangadharan, Vasiliki Chatzi, Karina J Kersbergen, Nigel Kennea, Denis V Azzopardi, A David Edwards

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleAcademicpeer-review

Abstract

Preterm infants who develop neurodevelopmental impairment do not always have recognized abnormalities on cerebral ultrasound, a modality routinely used to assess prognosis. In a high proportion of infants, MRI detects punctate white matter lesions that are not seen on ultrasonography. To determine the relation of punctate lesions to brain development and early neurodevelopmental outcome we used multimodal brain MRI to study a large cohort of preterm infants. Punctate lesions without other focal cerebral or cerebellar lesions were detected at term equivalent age in 123 (24.3%) (59 male) of the 506 infants, predominantly in the centrum semiovale and corona radiata. Infants with lesions had higher gestational age, birth weight, and less chronic lung disease. Punctate lesions showed a dose dependent relation to abnormalities in white matter microstructure, assessed with tract-based spatial statistics, and reduced thalamic volume (p < 0.0001), and predicted unfavourable motor outcome at a median (range) corrected age of 20.2 (18.4-26.3) months with sensitivity (95% confidence intervals) 71 (43-88) and specificity 72 (69-77). Punctate white matter lesions without associated cerebral lesions are common in preterm infants currently not regarded as at highest risk for cerebral injury, and are associated with widespread neuroanatomical abnormalities and adverse early neurodevelopmental outcome.

Original languageEnglish
Article number13250
JournalScientific Reports
Volume7
Issue number1
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2017

Keywords

  • Paediatric research
  • Prognostic markers

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