Abstract:
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Disease duration is an important factor for multiple sclerosis (MS) patients to understand the natural history of MS, make appropriate treatment decisions, and aid in prognosis. However, true disease duration can be difficult to estimate because the clinical disease onset, defined as the age of the first clinical symptom, is probably years after the biological onset and the onset of tissue injury visible on structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Traditionally, linear mixed modeling has been used to fit the trajectory of brain atrophy, but it is not an effective method for representing the complexity of aging data. We propose a mixed spline modeling approach to more accurately fit the trajectory of brain atrophy that could be used to estimate the age of onset of disease-related brain (thalamic) atrophy. The onset of brain tissue loss can be estimated as the age when the spline curve trajectory of an MS patient starts to depart from that of a normal aging spline curve trajectory. However, it is difficult to find sufficient longitudinal data over the entire lifespan to fit a mixed spline model. Thus, we have introduced a new concept of “fish bone” data structure and novel statistical approaches to construct pseudo-longitudinal data from a large cross-sectional normal aging data using imputation. In a simulation study, we have identified unrestricted B-Spline with TOEPLIZ as G-side matrix as the best mixed spline model. When applied to data from 470 MS cases and 1272 controls, a strong correlation was found between spline estimated vs. observed longitudinal values in independent validation data. Individual trajectory plots from the B-Spline mixed model showed a consistent pattern of similar trajectory curves for MS and normal aging at early ages, with gradual departure from each other over time.
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