Abstract
This study aimed to assess the role of multifocal visual-evoked potentials (mfVEPs) as a guiding factor for clinical conversion of radiologically isolated syndrome (RIS). We longitudinally followed a cohort of 15 patients diagnosed with RIS. All subjects underwent thorough ophthalmological, neurological and imaging examinations. The mfVEP signals were analysed to obtain features in the time domain (SNRmin: amplitude, Latmax: monocular latency) and in the continuous wavelet transform (CWT) domain (bmax: instant in which the CWT function maximum appears, Nmax: number of CWT function maximums). The best features were used as inputs to a RUSBoost boosting-based sampling algorithm to improve the mfVEP diagnostic performance. Five of the 15 patients developed an objective clinical symptom consistent with an inflammatory demyelinating central nervous system syndrome during follow-up (mean time: 13.40 months). The (SNRmin) variable decreased significantly in the group that converted (2.74 ± 0.92 vs. 4.07 ± 0.95, p = 0.01). Similarly, the (bmax) feature increased significantly in RIS patients who converted (169.44 ± 24.81 vs. 139.03 ± 11.95 (ms), p = 0.02). The area under the curve analysis produced SNRmin and bmax values of 0.92 and 0.88, respectively. These results provide a set of new mfVEP features that can be potentially useful for predicting prognosis in RIS patients.
Introduction
The afferent visual system is affected very frequently and at a very early stage in demyelinating processes. Consequently, study of it may lead to broader and deeper understanding of these neurological pathologies1,2. Diagnosis and evaluation over time of the largely subclinical nature of defects of the afferent visual pathway in demyelinating processes require the use of innovative structural and functional diagnostic technologies such as latest-generation optical coherence tomography (OCT) and multifocal visual-evoked potentials (mfVEPs), respectively3.
The increasing use of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to evaluate clinical pictures such as migraine, dizziness or vertigo has led to the emergence of a new clinical entity—radiologically isolated syndrome (RIS)—within demyelinating processes’ clinical spectrum4. This syndrome is characterized by the detection in MRI of lesions in the white matter of the central nervous system (CNS) that, due to their size, location and morphology, are highly suggestive of demyelinating plaques exhibiting dissemination in space (DIS) in subjects presenting with normal neurological examination results and no history of signs or symptoms of multiple sclerosis (MS)4. The recently published MAGNIMS consensus recommendations5 propose using the same DIS criterion, as set out in the latest review of the McDonald criteria6, to diagnose RIS and MS.
Since RIS was first described there has been great interest in establishing the risk of the syndrome evolving into MS in these subjects. According to various studies, some patients diagnosed with RIS will eventually progress to MS, suggesting that this syndrome may represent a preclinical stage of MS, at least in some cases7,8. Recent studies suggest that patients with RIS, clinically isolated syndrome (CIS) and relapsing–remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) all share non-motor clinical characteristics9,10 and suffer quantitative brain tissue damage11, indicating that RIS evinces MS in its early, preclinical form.
The clinical evolution of patients who meet the diagnostic criteria for RIS is uncertain12. It is therefore important to differentiate between those subjects at high risk of suffering demyelinating clinical events and being diagnosed with CIS, RRMS or primary progressive multiple sclerosis (PPMS) and those with static lesions or lesions due to other aetiologies. A subject with RIS can remain asymptomatic and present a stable MRI, develop new lesions in follow-up MRIs while remaining asymptomatic, or present a first clinical event typical of MS, i.e. CIS or even PPMS or RRMS.
Clinical management of RIS patients, who meet DIS criteria in MRI scans but show no symptoms, remains a major challenge in clinical practice as there is a lack of scientific evidence relating to this pathology13,14.
To the best of our knowledge, no studies have been conducted into the role of mfVEPs in RIS patients and evaluation of the risk of conversion of RIS to CIS/MS. MfVEPs objectively evaluate visual function and the integrity of the optical pathway15 and have been used to study various optic nerve and ganglion cell diseases16. In this technique, the visual stimulus is usually subdivided into a number of sectors (typically 60). Each of these sectors is independently stimulated using specialized software. The electrical activity evoked in the visual cortex by each stimulus is recorded in electroencephalograms (EEGs). From a single, continuous EEG signal, a mathematical algorithm extracts the evoked response generated by each sector17,18.
Traditional analysis of mfVEP recordings is based on the study of the recordings’ amplitudes and latencies16,18. However, it has been demonstrated that in some cases diagnosis using mfVEP signals can be improved using advanced signal filtering and extraction algorithms, such as the wavelet transform19, empirical mode decomposition20, and singular spectrum analysis21, among other alternatives.
The goal of our study was to assess the role of multifocal visual-evoked potentials as a guiding factor for RIS subject conversion to CIS/MS.
Material and methods
Fifteen asymptomatic subjects (13 females, 2 males; mean age 38.9 years; range 19.7–50.0 years) were enrolled in the study. All fulfilled the recently identified criteria for RIS which imply that none of the subjects had previously experienced remitting clinical symptoms consistent with neurological dysfunction of the CNS12. All subjects were consecutively contacted by the same neurologist. At baseline, we recorded their detailed historical and current clinical data and key episodes in the course of their RIS. Comprehensive neurological and ophthalmological examinations and structural neuro-imaging of the brain and spinal cord were performed.
All subjects were examined using an identical MRI protocol. Brain MRI scans were obtained in a single session using a Philips Gyroscan operating at 1.5 T (Philips Medical Systems, Best, The Netherlands). All participants presented asymptomatic T2-hyperintense brain lesions greater than 3 mm in diameter fulfilling the Barkhof criteria22. None of them had experienced neurological symptoms suggestive of clinical manifestation of MS.
The study protocol was approved by the University Hospital Principe de Asturias Review Board and adhered to the tenets of the Declaration of Helsinki, and all participants provided their informed consent. Data were kept in accordance with Spanish Law 15/1999 on data protection to protect patient confidentially.
Multifocal visual-evoked potential recordings
As previously described20,23, mfVEP signals were recorded monocularly with VERIS software 5.9 (Electro-Diagnostic Imaging, Inc., Redwood City, CA). The visual stimulus was a scaled dartboard with a diameter of 44.5 degrees, containing 60 sectors, each with 16 alternating checks. The luminance for the white and black checks was 200 and < 3 cd/m2, respectively. The checks in each sector were reversed in contrast using a pseudorandom sequence at a frame rate of 75 Hz. The signals were amplified at a gain of 105 at a bandwidth between 3 and 100 Hz. The sampling frequency was 1200 Hz, obtaining 600 samples in each recording (length 500 ms). The signals were digital-passband-filtered (1–35 Hz) using the fast Fourier transform. Three channels were obtained for each sector from the differences between the active electrodes and the reference electrode, along with three additional derived channels. Each channel was divided into two different intervals: the signal window (45–150 ms), which contains the evoked potential response, and the noise window (325–430 ms), which essentially contains noise21.
Multifocal VEP response analysis and classification
Analysis of the mfVEP recordings was performed in the time domain (amplitude and latency) and the continuous wavelet transform (CWT) domain (variables bmax and Nmax).
The amplitude of the mfVEP recording was quantified as the signal-to-noise ratio (SNR), calculated as18:
where RMS(X45–150 ms) was the root mean square (RMS) amplitude of the waveform in the signal window. The mean RMS(X325–430 ms) was the average RMS amplitude of all 60 waveforms in the noise windows. In each of the sectors, only the best channel (i.e. the one with the highest SNR) was analysed21.
For each study subject eye the following time domain features were obtained from the mfVEP signals: (1) SNR (dimensionless: V/V): which corresponds to the mean value in all sectors of an eye with the amplitude of the signals (Eq. 1) and; (2) mean monocular latency value (ms) of all sectors of each eye. In each sector, monocular latency was obtained by finding the instant of maximum correlation with the normative database17.
The CWT of a time signal, x(t), is defined as24:
where Ψ*(t) is the complex conjugate of wavelet function Ψ(t) (real Daubechies 7 wavelet: db7); a (dimensionless) is the dilation parameter of the wavelet; and b (ms) is the translation parameter (a,b ∈ R; a ≠ 0). As the CWT can describe time and frequency components of a signal in detail, it is possible to obtain new mfVEP signal descriptors that could constitute electrophysiological biomarkers.
For each sector, the best channel was selected and the CWT modulus was obtained: |T(a,b)|. The following features were calculated: Translation bmax (ms) at which the absolute maximum value (max|T(a,b)|) appears and Number of local maxima (Nmax) (dimensionless) in |T(a,b)| that exceed (max|T(a,b)|)/3. The mean value of these variables was then obtained in the 60 sectors of each eye.
For each patient, the following variables extracted from the time analysis and CWT were considered: (1) SNRmin: SNR value of that patient's eye with least amplitude; (2) Latmax: monocular latency of the eye that presents the greatest delay in the evoked response; (3) Translation (bmax) of the eye that presents the highest value in the wavelet domain; (4) Number of local maxima (Nmax) of the eye that presents the highest value in the wavelet domain. The variables that best identified the patients who converted clinically were selected.
RUSBoost25 is a hybrid data sampling/boosting algorithm designed to improve the performance of models trained on skewed data. The boosting process assigns greater weights to misclassified examples, which are usually the minority class examples. RUSBoost is especially effective at classifying imbalanced data, as in our case, in which the relationship between patients who convert (RIS_conv) and those who do not (RIS_non_conv) is 1/3.
Statistical analysis
Statistical analyses were performed using IBM SPSS Statistics 25 software (SPSS Inc. Chicago, Illinois, USA).Intergroup comparison was performed with the Fisher exact test for categorical variables and with the t-test or Wilcoxon test for quantitative variables. All tests were 2-tailed and p < 0.05 was considered statistically significant. Survival analysis was used to assess time-dependent variables using Kaplan–Meier estimates. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) was employed to assess the discrimination capability for each of the features proposed in this study. The classification process was summarized in a confusion matrix with sensitivity, specificity and ROC (receiver operating characteristic) analysis parameters.
Results
All subjects with RIS presented normal neurological examination results and conventional MRI scans, and the Barkhof criteria were confirmed in all patients. Table 1 summarizes the baseline demographic and the clinical and radiological characteristics of the RIS study cohort, including the reason for the first MRI scan. The study cohort principally comprised women (13/15). Mean age was 38.9 years, range 19.7–50 years. A positive family history of MS was not observed in any member of the study group. All subjects had expanded disability status scale scores of 0.0 on the initial baseline examination. Reasons for the initial MRI brain scan identifying CNS anomalies suggestive of demyelinating disease were migraine (33.3%), vertigo (20%), tinnitus (13.3%), anosmia (6.6%) and paraesthesia (6.6%). None of these complaints were related to a demyelinating event. None of our RIS subjects had undergone any approved disease-modifying therapies before the development of their first clinical event. At baseline, 14 subjects (93.3%) had > 9 T2-hyperintense MRI lesions, 14 (93.3%) had periventricular lesions, 10 (66,6%) had juxtacortical lesions and 1 (6.6%) had infratentorial lesions. Gadolinium-positive lesions and spinal cord lesions were present in 5 (33.3%) and 2 (13.3%) subjects, respectively.
During the study follow-up period (mean time: 13.40 months; range: 9–19 months), five (5/15; 33.3%) RIS subjects presented radiological and clinical conversion to the following conditions: 3 (60%) presented RRMS; 1 (20%) presented PPMS and 1 (20%) presented CIS syndrome. Survival analysis (Fig. 1) was used to assess time-dependent variables and the endpoint was the time from the first MRI to CIS/MS. The 12-month first acute or progressive clinical event rate in the RIS group was 26.6% (4/15). In all patients experiencing clinical episodes, symptoms proved to be consistent with a demyelinating event.
Kaplan–Meier survival curve showing the risk of clinical progression. At 1 year, 73.3% of RIS patients have not experienced CIS/MS conversion. At 2 years, 66.6% of patients have not progressed. This image was generated using Prism (Version: 5, Url: https://www.graphpad.com/).
Subjects who progressed clinically (RIS_conv) (5/15, 33.3%) were significantly younger than those who did not convert (RIS_non_conv): 30.89 ± 7.97 versus 42.96 ± 7.06, p = 0.01. No significant differences in high- and low-contrast BCVA (logmar) were found between the eyes of both groups (0.0 ± 0.03 vs. 0.0 ± 0.01; p = 0.56). In addition, no significant differences were observed in the total number of white matter lesions in the baseline MRI scan between the two groups (19.2 ± 4.69 vs. 18.2 ± 8.01, p = 0.66) or in the number of spinal and gadolinium-enhanced lesions (p > 0.25) or other MRI lesions (p > 0.28) between the two groups.
Figure 2 shows the mfVEP recordings (array of 60 signals from the best channel) taken from an RIS_non_conv subject (a) and an RIS_conv patient (b). In both cases, it shows in detail an mfVEP signal for a given sector (Fig. 2c,d) and its respective |T(a,b)| functions (Fig. 2e,f). In this particular example, the amplitudes of the RIS_non_conv subject's mfVEP signals are greater than those of the RIS_conv patient.
Multi-phase graphical representation of the method implemented. (a) mfVEP arrays of an RIS_non_conv patient. (b) mfVEP arrays of an RIS_conv patient. (c) X(t) signal in the sector marked in red in (a). (d) X(t) signal in the sector marked in red in (b). (e) CWT modulus of the signal represented in (c). (f) CWT modulus of the signal represented in (d). These images were generated using Matlab (Version: R2018b, Url: https://www.mathworks.com/products/matlab.html.
Table 2 shows the results obtained with the two analysis variables selected in the mfVEP signals’ time domain: SNRmin, Latmax, and the two variables (bmax and Nmax) obtained from the CWT analysis to try to identify those RIS subjects at greatest risk of progression. Thus, we observed that the (SNRmin) variable decreased significantly among RIS_conv subjects (2.74 ± 0.92 vs. 4.07 ± 0.95, p = 0.010). However, for the Latmax variable (0.22 ± 3.62 vs. 0.55 ± 1.50 ms) we did not observe significant differences between the two groups (p = 0.62). At the same time, the (bmax) variable increased significantly in the RIS_conv group (169.44 ± 24.81 vs. 139.03 ± 11.95 (ms), p = 0.02), and we did not observe significant differences in the Nmax variable between the two groups (35.05 ± 15.19 vs. 24.80 ± 9.93; p = 0.086).
We then evaluated the diagnostic accuracy of these mfVEP signal variables using ROC curve analysis. Thus, the SNRmin and bmax variables obtained AUC values of 0.92 and 0.88, respectively, while the Latmax and Nmax values were lower (0.58 and 0.78, respectively). On average, the two variables obtained in the CWT domain together provide greater diagnostic accuracy (AUCMEAN = 0.83) than the two standard amplitude and latency variables (AUCMEAN = 0.75). Figure 3 shows the boxplots of the four features studied.
Boxplot of variables included in the study: (a) SNRmin variable, (b) Latmax variable, (c) bmax variable, (d) Nmax variable. These images were generated using Matlab (Version: R2018b, Url: https://www.mathworks.com/products/matlab.html.
After testing all the possible combinations, the best results in the classifier were achieved by using as inputs the two variables with the greatest discriminant capacity: SNRmin and bmax. The RUSBoosted Trees classifier was implemented in the Matlab Classification Learner Application (MathWorks, Natick, MA) with cross-validation folds = 15 folds. Cross-validation26 protects against overfitting by partitioning the dataset into folds and estimating accuracy on each fold. The results of classification using this system on our database are perfect, obtaining sensitivity = specificity = AUCCLASSIFIER = 1. Figure 4 shows the ROC plot for the 4 variables analysed and for the classifier implemented.
ROC graph of the variables and classifier. (a) ROC of SNRmin. (b) ROC of Latmax. (c) ROC of bmax. (d) ROC of Nmax. (e) ROC of the RUSBoosted Trees classifier. These images were generated using Matlab (Version: R2018b, Url: https://www.mathworks.com/products/matlab.html.
Discussion
Scientific work-up of patients with RIS may be a key step to expanding our knowledge of the pathogenesis of MS. This study provides a first insight into the afferent system of the visual pathway in RIS patients by analysing mfVEP responses and by describing and characterizing new parameters in the mfVEPs’ waveforms in order to monitor RIS progression.
Several studies have already shown that the mfVEP can be more sensitive in detecting optic nerve abnormalities than automated visual perimetry or OCT in both affected and unaffected eyes of CIS and MS subjects27,28,29. MfVEP latency and amplitude have been used as surrogate markers of demyelination and axonal loss in MS, respectively30,31,32,33. MfVEP amplitude has been shown to be a functional biomarker of axonal loss in MS34 while prolonged latencies in CIS subjects who have presented with optic neuritis (ON) are associated with increased risk of developing clinically definite MS35. In this regard, mfVEP response latency and amplitude show myelin and axonal integrity respectively. Hence, reduced amplitude reveals retinal ganglion cell or axonal loss whereas longer mfVEP latency indicates demyelination. Notwithstanding, latency, amplitude and structural retinal changes are all intimately related; thus, greater demyelination or prolonged latency may give on to more axonal degeneration due to loss of the metabolic support28.
The results of this study provide an insight into visual pathway neurodegeneration in RIS and new electrophysiological predictive factors to help monitor disease progression in RIS subjects. Analysis of the mfVEP recordings obtained in this study was performed in both the time domain (amplitude and latency) and the CWT domain (bmax and Nmax variables). We observed that greatest diagnostic accuracy as regards progression was achieved with the SNRmin \(\left( {{\text{AUC}}_{{{\text{SNR}}_{{{\text{min}}}} }} = 0.92} \right){ }\) variable, although in terms of the mean value the two CWT variables show greater capacity to identify those patients who will evolve clinically. This is one more example of how performing wavelet analysis on a bioelectric signal allows us to calculate new features that complement the classic biomarkers obtained in the time domain19,36. What is more, the best results in the automatic classifier (Fig. 4) are obtained by combining an input in the time domain (SNRmin) with another in the CWT domain (bmax).
Long-term prospective follow-up of patients with RIS is still rather limited. In our study, one third of our patient cohort progressed clinically, in line with the findings published in other papers. One of these first studies12 revealed that about 34% of RIS patients developed MS within 5 years; similarly, another study37 observed that 26.7% of their RIS patients converted to MS at 4.2 ± 1.4 years of follow-up. In a larger trial7, 128 out of 453 (28.2%) RIS-diagnosed subjects evolved to symptomatic MS. These differences in RIS progression between published studies could be explained by differences in the duration of follow-up, the population studied and the diagnostic tests used38.
The capacity to correctly identify and predict the evolution of those RIS patients at greatest risk of clinical progression is of great interest, as a significant cohort of them will progress over time to more advanced forms of demyelination. Younger age at RIS diagnosis, sex (male), higher number of MRI T2-hyperintense lesions, presence of spinal and gadolinium-enhanced MRI lesions and abnormal conventional VEPs have been associated previously with an increase in the risk of progression7,8,39,40,41.
Our study showed that the functional deficit in the visual afferent pathway detected by mfVEPs in our RIS cohort is in line with the structural loss in the retina observed in recent studies using OCT where retinal nerve fibre layer (RNFL) thickness and ganglion cell inner plexiform (GCIPL) layer thinning have been associated with clinical progression in RIS2.
Later generation spectral-domain OCTs have improved resolution and reliability to small RNFL changes, in addition to being able to assess the ganglion cell-inner plexiform (GCIPL) retinal layers, and also by utilizing the intereye difference of the GCIPL and RNFL. Likely, It’s expected new generation spectral-domain OCT could achieve multiple aims regarding diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment monitoring in RIS and related disorders42.
We acknowledge that our results should be externally validated in other larger cohorts and that combination with other biomarkers identified in the literature (based on MRI, cognitive deficit, etc.) would likely increase prognostic value. In summary, a significant incidence of subclinical optic nerve involvement was detected in RIS eyes by means of mfVEP and our results indicate that the use of advanced analysis of mfVEP signals may help identify those high-risk RIS subjects who will progress clinically to more advanced forms of demyelinating pathology.
Data availability
The datasets generated during and/or analysed during the current study are available from the corresponding author on reasonable request.
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Acknowledgements
This study was funded by the Carlos III Health Institute and the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF, “A way to make Europe”) under the "Plan Estatal de Investigación Científica y Técnica y de Innovación 2017-2020" (RD16/0008/0020; FIS PI18-00754) and by the Secretariat of State for Research, Development and Innovation, Grant: DPI2017-88438-R (AEI/FEDER, EU).
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J.M.J., M.R.D., L.B.V. & R.B.V. wrote the main manuscriprt; J.M.J., M.R.D., C.P.R. & M.O. prepared tables and figures; All authors reviewed the manuscript.
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Miguel, J.M., Roldán, M., Pérez-Rico, C. et al. Using advanced analysis of multifocal visual-evoked potentials to evaluate the risk of clinical progression in patients with radiologically isolated syndrome. Sci Rep 11, 2036 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-81826-z
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-81826-z
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