Functional connectivity MRI provides an imaging correlate for chimeric antigen receptor T-cell-associated neurotoxicity

Sophia Stoecklein(LMU Klinikum), Stephan Wunderlich(LMU Klinikum), Boris Papazov(LMU Klinikum), Michael Winkelmann(LMU Klinikum), Wolfgang G. Kunz(LMU Klinikum), Katharina Mueller(LMU Klinikum), Katharina Ernst(LMU Klinikum), Veit M. Stoecklein(German Cancer Research Center), Viktoria Blumenberg(German Cancer Research Center), Philipp Karschnia(German Cancer Research Center), Veit Bücklein(LMU Klinikum), Kai Rejeski(German Cancer Research Center), Christian Schmidt(LMU Klinikum), Michael von Bergwelt‐Baildon(German Cancer Research Center), Joerg‐Christian Tonn(German Cancer Research Center), Jens Ricke(LMU Klinikum), Hesheng Liu(Medical University of South Carolina), Jan Rémi(LMU Klinikum), Marion Subklewe(German Cancer Research Center), Louisa von Baumgarten(German Cancer Research Center), Florian Schoeberl(LMU Klinikum)
Neuro-Oncology Advances
January 1, 2023
Cited by 18Open Access
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Abstract

Abstract Background Treatment of hematological malignancies with chimeric antigen receptor modified T cells (CART) is highly efficient, but often limited by an immune effector cell-associated neurotoxicity syndrome (ICANS). As conventional MRI is often unremarkable during ICANS, we aimed to examine whether resting-state functional MRI (rsfMRI) is suitable to depict and quantify brain network alterations underlying ICANS in the individual patient. Methods The dysconnectivity index (DCI) based on rsfMRI was longitudinally assessed in systemic lymphoma patients and 1 melanoma patient during ICANS and before or after clinical resolution of ICANS. Results Seven lymphoma patients and 1 melanoma patient (19–77 years; 2 female) were included. DCI was significantly increased during ICANS with normalization after recovery (P = .0039). Higher ICANS grades were significantly correlated with increased DCI scores (r = 0.7807; P = .0222). DCI increase was most prominent in the inferior frontal gyrus and the frontal operculum (ie, Broca’s area) and in the posterior parts of the superior temporal gyrus and the temporoparietal junction (ie, Wernicke’s area) of the language-dominant hemisphere, thus reflecting the major clinical symptoms of nonfluent dysphasia and dyspraxia. Conclusions RsfMRI-based DCI might be suitable to directly quantify the severity of ICANS in individual patients undergoing CAR T-transfusion. Besides ICANS, DCI seems a promising diagnostic tool to quantify functional brain network alterations during encephalopathies of different etiologies, in general.


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