Higher perivascular space volume in very premature born adults

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Abstract

BACKGROUND

Perivascular spaces (PVS), visible on brain MRI, contribute to the brain clearance system and are associated with age and neurodegenerative disorders. While lower volumes of PVS in the forebrain’s white matter and basal ganglia have been also demonstrated in preterm-born neonates, the long-term trajectory of PVS after premature birth remains unclear. This study tests for altered PVS volumes in very preterm/very low birthweight-born (VP/VLBW) adults compared to full-term controls and explores potential associations with cognitive performance.

METHODS

PVS were assessed on T2-weighted MRI from 97 VP/VLBW and 89 full-term (FT) subjects at 26 years from the prospective, population-based Bavarian Longitudinal Study. PVS volume and count was based on automated nnU-Net-based segmentation. Regional PVS volumes were normalized by corresponding regional parenchyma volumes. Cognitive performance was assessed by the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale. MANCOVA was used for PVS group comparisons, Spearman rank correlations for testing PVS relationships with birth variables and cognitive scores.

RESULTS

VP/VLBW-born adults showed significantly higher normalized PVS volumes in bilateral basal ganglia (p < 0.001, partial η² = 0.096) and insula-related white matter (p = 0.001, partial η² = 0.057). In the basal ganglia, higher PVS volumes were negatively correlated with gestational age (ρ = -0.223, p = 0.030) and positively correlated with the Intensity of Neonatal Treatment Index (ρ = 0.222, p = 0.030) in the VP/VLBW group. PVS volume was not associated with IQ scores.

CONCLUSION

We demonstrate region-specific alterations of perivascular spaces in VP/VLBW-born adults. Data suggest that prematurity has lasting impact on the PVS.

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