Chen Zumin, Garic Dea, Xu Yinuo, Smith Rachel G, Weisenfeld Leigh Anne H, Kim Sun Hyung, Styner Martin A, Piven Joseph, Philpot Benjamin D, Hazlett Heather C, Shen Mark D
Carolina Institute for Developmental Disabilities, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, NC, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill School of Medicine, NC, USA.
Ann Child Neurol Soc. 2025 Jul 30. doi: 10.1002/cns3.70024.
Previous studies demonstrated that children with autism have enlarged volumes of extra-axial cerebrospinal fluid (EA-CSF) and increased ratio of EA-CSF to brain volume, indicating that EA-CSF is disproportionally increased beyond macrocephaly often observed in autism. It is unknown whether EA-CSF is disproportionally enlarged in Angelman syndrome (AS), which shares phenotypic features with autism (sleep problems, seizures) but is characterized by microcephaly. This study examined EA-CSF and total cerebral volume (TCV) in AS children compared to neurotypical (NT) controls to test whether EA-CSF is disproportionally enlarged and is associated with sleep problems and seizures.
MRI scans were acquired in n=29 AS (M[SD]=6.95±2.83 years) and n=27 NT children (M[SD]=7.96±2.24). EA-CSF and TCV were compared using ANCOVA, controlling for age, sex, and group interactions. In AS, associations between EA-CSF, sleep quality, and seizure severity were evaluated by linear regression.
Children with AS had 22% smaller TCV (<.0001) yet nearly identical EA-CSF volumes (=.35). The ratio of EA-CSF to TCV was 48% higher in AS (<.0001). Increased EA-CSF ratio in AS was associated with sleep initiation problems (=.002) and seizure severity (=.032).
Children with AS have disproportionally higher EA-CSF volume than would be predicted by their smaller brain size. EA-CSF was associated with sleep problems and seizures, which impact quality of life and are target endpoints of current AS clinical trials. Excessive CSF suggests that CSF circulation might be perturbed in AS, which could have implications for brain waste clearance, as well as impact the biodistribution of AS therapies delivered via CSF.
先前的研究表明,自闭症儿童的轴外脑脊液(EA-CSF)体积增大,且EA-CSF与脑体积的比值增加,这表明EA-CSF的增加超出了自闭症中常见的巨头症比例。尚不清楚在与自闭症具有共同表型特征(睡眠问题、癫痫发作)但以小头症为特征的天使综合征(AS)中,EA-CSF是否也会不成比例地增大。本研究比较了AS儿童与神经典型(NT)对照儿童的EA-CSF和全脑体积(TCV),以测试EA-CSF是否不成比例地增大,以及是否与睡眠问题和癫痫发作有关。
对n = 29名AS儿童(平均年龄[标准差]=6.95±2.83岁)和n = 27名NT儿童(平均年龄[标准差]=7.96±2.24岁)进行了MRI扫描。使用协方差分析(ANCOVA)比较EA-CSF和TCV,并控制年龄、性别和组间交互作用。在AS组中,通过线性回归评估EA-CSF、睡眠质量和癫痫严重程度之间的关联。
AS儿童的TCV小22%(P<.0001),但EA-CSF体积几乎相同(P=.35)。AS儿童中EA-CSF与TCV的比值高48%(P<.0001)。AS儿童中EA-CSF比值增加与入睡问题(P=.002)和癫痫严重程度(P=.032)有关。
AS儿童的EA-CSF体积比根据其较小的脑容量所预测的比例更高。EA-CSF与睡眠问题和癫痫发作有关,这些会影响生活质量,并且是当前AS临床试验的目标终点。脑脊液过多表明AS患者的脑脊液循环可能受到干扰,这可能对脑废物清除有影响,也会影响通过脑脊液给药的AS治疗药物的生物分布。