Changes in Gray Matter Morphology and White Matter Microstructure Across the Adult Lifespan in People With Temporal Lobe Epilepsy

Authors

Judy Chen
Alexander Ngo
Raul Rodriguez-Cruces
Jessica Royer
Maria Eugenia Caligiuri
Antonio Gambardella
Luis Concha
Simon S. Keller
Fernando Cendes
Clarissa L. Yasuda
Marina K. Alvim
Leonardo Bonilha
Ezequiel Gleichgerrcht
Niels K. Focke
Barbara A. K. Kreilkamp
Martin Domin
Felix Von Podewils
Soenke Langner
Christian Rummel
Roland Wiest
Pascal Martin
Raviteja Kotikalapudi
Benjamin Bender
Terence J. O'Brien
Benjamin Sinclair
Lucy Vivash
Patrick Kwan
Patricia Desmond
Elaine Lui
Gian M. Duma
Paolo Bonanni
Alice Ballerini
Anna Elisabetta Vaudano
Stefano Meletti
Manuela Tondelli
Saud Alhusaini
Colin P Doherty
Gianpiero Cavalleri
Norman Delanty
Reetta Kalviainen
Graeme D Jackson
Magdalena Kowalczyk
Mario Mascalchi
Mira K H G Semmelroch
Rhys H Thomas
Hamid Soltanian-Zadeh, Henry Ford HealthFollow
Esmaeil Davoodi-Bojd, Henry Ford HealthFollow
Junsong Zhang
Matteo Lenge
Renzo Guerrini
Emanuele Bartolini
Khalid Hamandi
Sonya Foley
Theodor Rüber
Tobias Bauer
Bernd Weber
Benoit Caldairou
Chantal Depondt
Julie Absil
Sarah J A Carr
Eugenio Abela
Mark P Richardson
Orrin Devinsky
Heath R Pardoe
Mariasavina Severino
Pasquale Striano
Domenico Tortora
Erik Kaestner
Sean N Hatton
Donatello Arienzo
Sjoerd B Vos
Mina Ryten
Peter N Taylor
John S Duncan
Christopher D Whelan
Marian Galovic
Gavin P Winston
Sophia I Thomopoulos
Paul M Thompson
Sanjay M Sisodiya
Angelo Labate
Carrie Mcdonald
Lorenzo Caciagli
Neda Bernasconi
Andrea Bernasconi
Sara Lariviere
Dewi Victoria Schrader
Boris C Bernhardt

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

9-23-2025

Publication Title

Neurology

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Temporal lobe epilepsy (TLE) is commonly associated with mesiotemporal pathology and widespread alterations of gray and white matter structures. Evidence supports a progressive condition, although the temporal evolution of TLE is poorly defined. In this ENIGMA-Epilepsy study, we aim to investigate structural alterations in gray and white matter across the adult lifespan in patients with TLE by charting both gray and white matter changes and explore the covariance of age-related alterations in both compartments.

METHODS: Mega-analysis of parcellated T1-weighted and diffusion MRI data across 18 international sites for patients with TLE was compared against healthy controls. We combined median-age split groupwise comparisons with cross-sectional sliding age-window analyses to explore gray (cortical thickness, subcortical volume) and white matter microstructure (fractional anisotropy, mean diffusivity) age-related changes. Five-year range age windows were constructed from mean z scores of all patients. Covariance analyses examined the coupled correlations of gray and white matter lifespan curves for each region.

RESULTS: We studied 769 patients with TLE and 885 healthy controls across an age range of 17-73 years. Robust (p(FDR) < 0.05) gray matter thickness/volume decline (d < -0.20) was seen across a broad cortico-subcortical territory, extending beyond the mesiotemporal lobe throughout the adult lifespan in patients with TLE. White matter changes were also widespread across multiple fiber tracts with peak effects in temporolimbic fibers in fractional anisotropy (d < -0.3, p(FDR) < 0.05) and mean diffusivity measures (d > 0.3, p(FDR) < 0.05). Changes spanned the adult time window and effects exceeded typical aging-related processes in patients at the level of cortical thickness, subcortical volume, and diffusion measures, particularly in patients older than 55 years. Covariance analyses revealed strong associations across multiple white matter tracts, subcortical structures, and cortical regions within and beyond the temporolimbic system.

DISCUSSION: This study highlights that patients with TLE exhibit more pronounced and widespread gray and white matter atrophy across the lifespan. The cross-sectional nature of our study limits definitive conclusions on whether the atrophy shown is progressive but emphasizes the importance of prompt diagnosis and intervention in patients. Collectively, our results motivate future longitudinal studies to clarify consequences of drug-resistant epilepsy.

Medical Subject Headings

Humans; Adult; White Matter/diagnostic imaging/pathology; Epilepsy; Temporal Lobe/diagnostic imaging/pathology; Gray Matter/diagnostic imaging/pathology; Male; Female; Middle Aged; Young Adult; Adolescent; Aged; Cross-Sectional Studies; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Diffusion Tensor Imaging

PubMed ID

40845263

Volume

105

Issue

6

First Page

213688

Last Page

213688

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