Reversibility of Impaired Large-Scale Functional Brain Networks in Cushing's Disease after Surgery Treatment: A Longitudinal Study

Neuroendocrinology. 2024;114(3):250-262. doi: 10.1159/000534789. Epub 2023 Nov 1.

Abstract

Introduction: Chronic exposure to excessive endogenous cortisol leads to brain changes in Cushing's disease (CD). However, it remains unclear how CD affects large-scale functional networks (FNs) and whether these effects are reversible after treatment. This study aimed to investigate functional network changes of CD patients and their reversibility in a longitudinal cohort.

Methods: Active CD patients (N = 37) were treated by transsphenoidal pituitary surgery and reexamined 3 months later. FNs were computed from resting-state fMRI data of the CD patients and matched normal controls (NCs, N = 37). A pattern classifier was built on the FNs to distinguish active CD patients from controls and applied to FNs of the CD patients at the 3-month follow-up. Two subgroups of endocrine-remitted CD patients were identified according to their classification scores, referred to as image-based phenotypically (IBP) recovered and unrecovered CD patients, respectively. The informative FNs identified by the classification model were compared between NCs, active CD patients, and endocrine-remitted patients as well as between IBP recovered and unrecovered CD patients to explore their functional network reversibility.

Results: All 37 CD patients reached endocrine remission after treatment. The classification model identified three informative FNs, including cerebellar network (CerebN), fronto-parietal network (FPN), and default mode network. Among them, CerebN and FPN partially recovered toward normal at 3 months after treatment. Moreover, the informative FNs were correlated with 24-h urinary-free cortisol and emotion scales in CD patients.

Conclusion: These findings suggest that CD patients have aberrant FNs that are partially reversible toward normal after treatment.

Keywords: Cortisol; Cushing’s disease; Emotion; Functional networks; Reversibility.

MeSH terms

  • Brain / diagnostic imaging
  • Brain / surgery
  • Humans
  • Hydrocortisone
  • Longitudinal Studies
  • Magnetic Resonance Imaging
  • Pituitary ACTH Hypersecretion* / surgery

Substances

  • Hydrocortisone

Grants and funding

This study was supported in part by the China Postdoctoral Science Foundation (2020T130070, 2019M650567), and the Clinical Application Research of Capital Characteristic Fund from the Beijing Municipal Science and Technology Commission (Z151100004015099).