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An fMRI-based neural marker for migraine without aura

  • Yiheng Tu
  • , Fang Zeng
  • , Lei Lan
  • , Zhengjie Li
  • , Nasim Maleki
  • , Bo Liu
  • , Jun Chen
  • , Chenchen Wang
  • , Joel Park
  • , Courtney Lang
  • , Gao Yujie
  • , Mailan Liu
  • , Zening Fu
  • , Zhiguo Zhang
  • , Fanrong Liang
  • , Jian Kong*
  • *Corresponding author for this work
  • Massachusetts General Hospital
  • Chengdu University of Traditional Chinese Medicine
  • Guangdong Provincial Hospital of Traditional Chinese Medicine
  • Tufts Medical Center
  • Ningxia Medical University
  • Hunan University of Chinese Medicine
  • The Mind Research Network
  • Shenzhen University

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

ObjectiveTo identify and validate an fMRI-based neural marker for migraine without aura (MwoA) and to examine its association with treatment response.MethodsWe conducted cross-sectional studies with resting-state fMRI data from 230 participants and machine learning analyses. In studies 1 through 3, we identified, cross-validated, independently validated, and cross-sectionally validated an fMRI-based neural marker for MwoA. In study 4, we assessed the relationship between the neural marker and treatment responses in migraineurs who received a 4-week real or sham acupuncture treatment, or were waitlisted, in a registered clinical trial.ResultsIn study 1 (n = 116), we identified a neural marker with abnormal functional connectivity within the visual, default mode, sensorimotor, and frontal-parietal networks that could discriminate migraineurs from healthy controls (HCs) with 93% sensitivity and 89% specificity. In study 2 (n = 38), we investigated the generalizability of the marker by applying it to an independent cohort of migraineurs and HCs and achieved 84% sensitivity and specificity. In study 3 (n = 76), we verified the specificity of the marker with new datasets of migraineurs and patients with other chronic pain disorders (chronic low back pain and fibromyalgia) and demonstrated 78% sensitivity and 76% specificity for discriminating migraineurs from nonmigraineurs. In study 4 (n = 116), we found that the changes in the marker responses showed significant correlation with the changes in headache frequency in response to real acupuncture.ConclusionWe identified an fMRI-based neural marker that captures distinct characteristics of MwoA and can link disease pattern changes to brain changes.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)E741-E751
JournalNeurology
Volume94
Issue number7
DOIs
StatePublished - 18 Feb 2020
Externally publishedYes

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