Structural brain networks shape individual-level progression of brain atrophy after stroke
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Stroke starts as a focal vascular lesion, but its structural consequences often extend beyond the lesion site, resulting in distributed brain atrophy whose organizing principles remain unclear. Here, using longitudinal MRI data from two stroke cohorts spanning the hyperacute to chronic stages, we tested whether and how post-stroke grey matter volume (GMV) change over time is constrained by large-scale brain networks across individuals. Coordinated deformation modelling showed that longitudinal GMV atrophy patterns were more strongly shaped by structural than by functional connectivity, with structural constraints already detectable in the acute phase. Network diffusion modelling further showed that atrophy patterns at 3 and 12 months were consistent with lesion-initiated propagation on the structural connectome, whereas model performance was weak in the early acute stage. The model-derived propagation stage did not increase monotonically with chronological time, indicating that it reflects the degree to which observed atrophy conforms to a network-consistent diffusion-like pattern rather than elapsed biological time. Inter-individual variation in propagation stage was associated with lesion size and with the topological and molecular properties of lesioned regions. Finally, lesion information combined with network diffusion modelling supported individualized prediction of later GMV atrophy patterns. These findings provide a network-based account of secondary degeneration after stroke and may inform individualized characterization of post-stroke structural reorganization.