Connectome-based brain fingerprints predict early cognitive decline in Parkinson’s patients with minor hallucinations

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Individual variability in connectome organization offers a unique framework for capturing patient-specific alterations and advancing personalized models in medicine. Minor hallucinations (MH) affect up to 40% of Parkinson’s disease (PD) patients and are early indicators of cognitive decline and dementia, hence crucial for early intervention. While previous studies focused on group-level differences, connectome-based brain fingerprinting enables deeper, individualized analysis of neural change. Applying this approach to PD patients with and without MH using resting-state fMRI, we show that each patient exhibited unique brain fingerprint, revealing rich quantifiable personalized features with medical relevance. MH-patients showed a loss of subject-specific features in brain networks linked to cognitive health, while somatosensory regions – typically less distinctive – became more prominent, emphasizing their role in MH pathogenesis. These differences enabled to identify – in an entirely data driven manner – patient-specific networks linked to early subclinical cognitive alterations, as well differential spatial fingerprinting organization linked to cortical densities of neurotransmitters. These findings reveal a distinct, patient-specific connectomic signature that differentiates PD patients with MH, uncovering early neural markers for precision medicine in PD.

Article activity feed