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Spinal cord demyelination predicts neurological deterioration in patients with mild degenerative cervical myelopathy

Abdul Al-Shawwa, Michael Craig, Kalum Ost, David C. Anderson, Steve Casha, W. Bradley Jacobs, Nathan Evaniew, Saswati Tripathy, Jacques Bouchard, Peter Lewkonia, Fred Nicholls, Alex Soroceanu, Ganesh Swamy, Kenneth Thomas, Stephan DuPlessis, Michael Yang, Julien Cohen-Adad, Nicholas Dea, Jefferson R. Wilson et David W. Cadotte

Article de revue (2025)

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Abstract

Background Degenerative cervical myelopathy (DCM) is the most common form of atraumatic spinal cord injury globally. Clinical guidelines regarding surgery for patients with mild DCM and minimal symptoms remain uncertain. This study aims to identify imaging and clinical predictors of neurological deterioration in mild DCM and explore pathophysiological correlates to guide clinical decision-making.

Methods Patients with mild DCM underwent advanced MRI scans that included T2-weighted, diffusion tensor imaging and magnetisation transfer (MT) sequences, along with clinical outcome measures at baseline and 6-month intervals after enrolment. Quantitative MRI (qMRI) metrics were derived above and below maximally compressed cervical levels (MCCLs). Various machine learning (ML) models were trained to predict 6 month neurological deterioration, followed by global and local model interpretation to assess feature importance.

Results A total of 49 patients were followed for a maximum of 2 years, contributing 110 6-month data entries. Neurological deterioration occurred in 38% of cases. The best-performing ML model, combining clinical and qMRI metrics, achieved a balanced accuracy of 83%, and an area under curve-receiver operating characteristic of 0.87. Key predictors included MT ratio (demyelination) above the MCCL in the dorsal and ventral funiculi and moderate tingling in the arm, shoulder or hand. qMRI metrics significantly improved predictive performance compared to models using only clinical (bal. acc=68.1%) or imaging data (bal. acc=57.4%).

Conclusions Reduced myelin content in the dorsal and ventral funiculi above the site of compression, combined with sensory deficits in the hands and gait/balance disturbances, predicts 6-month neurological deterioration in mild DCM and may warrant early surgical intervention.

Département: Département de génie électrique
Institut de génie biomédical
URL de PolyPublie: https://publications.polymtl.ca/62627/
Titre de la revue: BMJ Neurology Open (vol. 7, no 1)
Maison d'édition: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd
DOI: 10.1136/bmjno-2024-000940
URL officielle: https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjno-2024-000940
Date du dépôt: 07 févr. 2025 14:48
Dernière modification: 01 déc. 2025 09:25
Citer en APA 7: Al-Shawwa, A., Craig, M., Ost, K., Anderson, D. C., Casha, S., Jacobs, W. B., Evaniew, N., Tripathy, S., Bouchard, J., Lewkonia, P., Nicholls, F., Soroceanu, A., Swamy, G., Thomas, K., DuPlessis, S., Yang, M., Cohen-Adad, J., Dea, N., Wilson, J. R., & Cadotte, D. W. (2025). Spinal cord demyelination predicts neurological deterioration in patients with mild degenerative cervical myelopathy. BMJ Neurology Open, 7(1), e000940 (13 pages). https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjno-2024-000940

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