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Neurotherapeutics

Elsevier BV

Preprints posted in the last 7 days, ranked by how well they match Neurotherapeutics's content profile, based on 11 papers previously published here. The average preprint has a 0.02% match score for this journal, so anything above that is already an above-average fit.

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Patient perceptions towards psychedelics for musculoskeletal pain: A cross-sectional survey

Li, E. J.; Mosharraf, B.; Ali, H.; Noyes, M.; Doshi, P.; Wallace, C.; Petranker, R.; Adili, A.; Khan, M.; Busse, J. W.; MacKillop, J.; Madden, K.

2026-06-01 pain medicine 10.64898/2026.05.29.26354422 medRxiv
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Background: Psychedelics are emerging as potential management options for chronic musculoskeletal pain due to preliminary evidence of effectiveness and low addictive potential, but patients perceptions remain unknown. This study assessed patient perceptions regarding psilocybin for musculoskeletal pain. Methods: We conducted a cross-sectional survey of adults ([≥]19) with musculoskeletal pain attending a hospital-based orthopaedic clinic. Participants reported demographics, perceptions of psychedelics for pain management, and willingness to participate in psychedelic research. Multivariable regression explored factors associated with perceived analgesic potential, and willingness to try a full therapeutic dose of psilocybin or a microdose. Results: Among 295 participants, 73% reported moderate-to-severe pain; 75% used analgesics; of these, 41% used opioids (86/209). While 24% reported prior psychedelic use, only 3% had discussed psychedelics with a healthcare provider. Most perceived that psilocybin had moderate-to-high effectiveness for pain (76%). Most respondents endorsed a moderate-to-high willingness to try microdoses (58%) and macrodoses (53%) of psilocybin for pain. Prior non-therapeutic psychedelic use predicted a 1.05-unit increase in perceived analgesic potential on the 10-point scale (p=.013). Willingness to try a macrodose of psilocybin was most strongly associated with prior non-therapeutic (B=3.16) and therapeutic (B=2.42) psychedelic use; in contrast, pain severity had a significant but modest association, with a 0.21-point increase in willingness for every 1-unit increase in pain severity (p=.017). Similarly, willingness to try a microdose of psilocybin was predicted by non-therapeutic (B=2.82) and therapeutic (B=2.48) use, whereas the effects of pain severity (B=0.20) and younger age (B=-0.30) were significant but small. Most respondents (52%) reported moderate-to-high willingness to participate in a trial of psilocybin for pain relief, and health risks were the primary concern (33%). Conclusions: Study findings suggest a majority hold neutral-to-positive perceptions of psilocybin for pain. Addressing perceived barriers, including health effects and gaps in patient knowledge, should be considered when designing future trials.

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Thalamic sonication in chronic disorders of consciousness: a mechanistic single-arm clinical trial

Monti, M. M.; Hopkins, A. R.; Spivak, N. M.; Cain, J. A.; Gumarang, J.; Patterson, D.; Rosario, E. R.; Schnakers, C.

2026-05-28 neurology 10.64898/2026.05.26.26354167 medRxiv
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Background: Thalamic low-intensity transcranial focused ultrasound (tFUS) has shown promise for increasing behavioral responsiveness in disorders of consciousness (DOC), but no study has examined whether it can causally modulate the well-validated behavioral, electrophysiological, and metabolic biomarkers of DOC impairment. Methods: Sixteen adult patients (44% Female; Age, M=37.81, SD=15.97) with a chronic DOC (Time Since Injury, M=3.39, SD=1.94 years) secondary to severe brain injury (TBI 44%, non-TBI 56%) underwent a 10-day inpatient, longitudinal, single-arm, open-label protocol. tFUS was delivered in a single session targeting the left central thalamus. Well-known behavioral (CRS-R), electrophysiological (EEG {delta}/{beta} ratio), metabolic (18F-FDG PET), and polysomnographic outcomes were assessed at baseline and after sonication. Results: The maximum CRS-R total score increased significantly following tFUS compared to baseline (M=13.27 vs. M=10.33; t(14)=7.407, p<0.001, d=1.913), as did the global EEG {delta}/{beta} ratio (N=14; W=17, p=0.025, r=0.68), with the degree of frontal slowing positively predicting behavioral gains ({tau}b=0.51, p=0.016). Glucose metabolism decreased bilaterally in thalamus and frontal, temporal, and parietal cortices at both post-tFUS timepoints compared to baseline. Finally, N2 sleep increased by 33% following tFUS (N=11; t(10)=2.386, p=0.038, d=0.72), though this did not survive correction. No severe adverse events were observed. Conclusion: Thalamic tFUS can causally modulate well-validated behavioral, electrophysiological, and metabolic biomarkers of DOC. The convergent inhibitory signature across these measures suggests a thalamocortical reset mechanism, complementing existing excitatory neuromodulation approaches and providing the mechanistic foundation for a large, randomized sham-controlled trial.

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Modifiable Predictors of Sleep Quality in Multiple Sclerosis: A Prospective Cohort Study

DelSignore, M.; Venkatesh, S.; Zhu, W.; Goodman, M.; Xia, Z.

2026-06-01 neurology 10.64898/2026.05.29.26354460 medRxiv
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Background. Poor sleep quality is common in people with multiple sclerosis (pwMS) and reduces quality of life. Objectives. To examine associations between modifiable factors and sleep quality in pwMS. Methods. In a prospective clinic cohort (2017-2023), we evaluated whether baseline measures of disability, depression, fatigue, and pain were associated with poor sleep quality (Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index, PSQI) cross-sectionally using covariate-adjusted linear regression, structural equation modeling (SEM), and LASSO logistic regression, and longitudinally using mixed-effects models. Results. In this cohort (n=750; mean age 48.9 years; 80.3% women, 88.7% relapsing type), higher body mass index ({beta} [95% CI]: 0.06 [0.01, 0.12], p=.001) and area deprivation index (6.78 [2.17, 11.39], p<.001) were associated with worse baseline PSQI scores. In adjusted analyses (n=730), disability, depression, fatigue, and pain were each associated with worse sleep. In SEM, pain had a moderate direct effect on sleep ({beta} [95% CI]: 0.56 [0.48, 0.64], p<.001). LASSO models that included pain outperformed the benchmark (AUROC 0.741 vs 0.517). Longitudinally (n=382), time and higher baseline pain predicted worse sleep ({beta} [95% CI]: time in months 0.04 [0.02, 0.06], p<.001; pain 0.36 [0.31, 0.41], p<.001). Conclusion. Pain is a key, potentially modifiable driver of poor sleep quality in pwMS.

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Shortened Cortical Silent Period in Children with Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder

Feier, D. S.; Gilbert, D. L.; Crocetti, D.; Migneault, K. Y.; Huddleston, D. A.; Horn, P. S.; Mostofsky, S. H.; Wu, S. W.

2026-05-28 neurology 10.64898/2026.05.26.26354157 medRxiv
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Background and Objectives In ADHD, a heterogeneous neurodevelopmental condition, behavioral and motor manifestations may reflect multiple inefficient or perturbed inhibitory systems. To evaluate Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (TMS) evoked cortical silent period (CSP) duration, an indicator of GABA(B) receptor-mediated inhibition in motor cortex, as a potential biomarker of Attention-Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder (ADHD) in children. Method We retrospectively analyzed TMS data, obtained using both round and figure-of-8 coils, from three cross-sectional studies conducted in 8- to 12-year-old children with ADHD (n=79; 10.7 +/- 1.5 years old) and age-and-sex-matched typically developing controls (n=96; 10.5 +/- 1.4 years old). Results Median CSP was 32% shorter in ADHD (p=0.02). Regression analysis demonstrated a relationship between shorter CSP and both lower active motor thresholds (p < 0.0001) and more severe hyperactivity symptom rating (p = 0.026). Test-retest CSP measures in 83 children showed moderate reliability (intraclass correlation 0.77 [ADHD], 0.75 [controls]). Conclusion TMS-evoked CSP may be a useful biomarker in future investigations of ADHD subtypes, domains of impaired function, or treatment outcomes.

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Advancing brain health equity after traumatic brain injury: A multi-stakeholder global priority-setting study

Mollayeva, T.; SantAna, T. T.; Shaikh, U.; Spouge, R.; Hanafy, S.; Fuller-Thomson, E.; McDonald, M.; Colantonio, A.; Cee, D.; McGettrick, G.; Lawlor, B.

2026-05-27 neurology 10.64898/2026.05.19.26353566 medRxiv
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The impact of social parameters on brain health among people with traumatic brain injury (TBI) has been extensively documented. However, translation of this evidence into policy and clinical practice remains limited. This may reflect a lack of coordinated and equity-driven approaches to brain health that integrate diverse stakeholder perspectives, limiting progress toward equity-oriented research and service delivery models. We conducted a convergent parallel mixed-methods study guided by the REporting guideline for PRIority SEtting of health research (REPRISE). We utilized the PROGRESS-Plus framework (Place of residence, Race/ethnicity, Occupation, Gender/sex, Religion, Education, Socioeconomic status, Social capital, and context-specific parameters) to ensure systematic consideration of social parameters in the study. For Objective 1, we synthesized existing evidence on social parameters and brain health outcomes. For Objective 2, we surveyed people with lived experience of TBI, family members/friends, clinicians, researchers, and community leaders across the globe to assess their prioritization of social parameters relevant to brain health. For Objective 3, we integrated evidence synthesis and stakeholder input through a structured Round Robin consensus activity to prioritize actionable areas for feasibility and impact. The activity culminated in the development of a knowledge mobilization agenda designed to inform equity-centred policy, research, and clinical practice. In Objective 1, we identified 59 publications with evidence on the effect of PROGRESS-Plus parameters on brain health outcomes following TBI. Meta-research highlighted that education, age, and country-level indicators are prognostic for brain health after TBI. In Objective 2, the highest-ranked priorities of 113 stakeholders across four continents (North America, Europe, Africa, and Oceania) were education, access to benefits, and income. These priorities were at the centre of discussion in Objective 3, which comprised idea sharing, refinement and thematic clustering, and a final prioritization poll. The resulting final 15 priorities were organized into two tracks: Track A, actions feasible in the short term, and Track B, longer-term implementation priorities. Building on this priority-setting process, co-created with stakeholders around the globe, the findings provide a roadmap for integration of social parameters in TBI research, knowledge exchange, policy, and practice.

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Distinct temporal dynamics of motor and neuropsychiatric responses to levodopa in Parkinson's disease

Benis, D.; Catalano Chiuve, S.; Rime, C.; Bratanov, C.; Bally, J. F.; Fleury, V.

2026-06-01 neurology 10.64898/2026.05.22.26353856 medRxiv
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Background Neuropsychiatric fluctuations in Parkinson's disease (PD) often accompany motor fluctuations, but their temporal relationship during the acute levodopa response remains unclear. Objectives To determine whether motor and neuropsychiatric responses occur synchronously during the OFF-to-ON transition. Methods Nineteen fluctuating PD patients underwent a high-resolution levodopa challenge with repeated assessments every 10 minutes for 60 minutes after levodopa administration. Motor symptoms (akinesia, rigidity) and neuropsychiatric fluctuations were quantified. Transition times (t25%-t50%-t75%-t100%) and response profiles were analyzed using correlation and clustering approaches. Results Motor and neuropsychiatric transition times were not correlated at any threshold (all FDR-corrected p>0.05; Bayes factors <1), supporting temporal dissociation. Among 18 patients with complete data, clustering revealed synchronous (6/18), neuropsychiatric-preceding (7/18), and motor-preceding (3/18) profiles. Conclusion Motor and neuropsychiatric responses to levodopa during PD fluctuations are partly independent and follow heterogeneous, patient-specific temporal profiles, supporting the search for distinct biomarkers and future individualized adaptative therapies

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SAA positivity rate amongst dual LRRK2-GBA1, GBA1 and LRRK2 carriers with Parkinson's disease

Ponger, P.; Nair, A. R.; Noah, N.; Caspell-Garcia, C.; Lafontant, D.-E.; Alcalay, R. N.

2026-05-27 neurology 10.64898/2026.05.26.26354106 medRxiv
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We investigated whether people with Parkinson's disease who are dual GBA1+LRRK2 carriers have a milder, LRRK2-like phenotype as previously reported. This was accomplished by comparing clinical features and alpha-synuclein seed amplification assay (SAA) positivity rates between dual GBA1+LRRK2-PD(n=13), GBA1-PD(n=169) and LRRK2-PD(n=175) carriers in a cross-sectional retrospective study of Parkinson's Progression Markers Initiative (PPMI) data. Our results show that GBA1+LRRK2-PD rate(83%) is closer to GBA1-PD rate(87%) rather than LRRK2-PD rate (62%mp-value>0.05). GBA1+LRRK2-PD have both non-motor and motor phenotypic similarity of GBA1-PD(p-value>0.05). This small PPMI cohort indicates that dual GBA1+LRRK2-PD carriers' SAA positivity and phenotype are aligned with GBA1-PD.

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Metabolomic Signatures of Brain Atrophy and Ibudilast Response in Progressive Multiple Sclerosis

Chen, M.; Noroozi, R.; Smith, M. D.; Sanjayan, M.; Tejera, C. H.; Bhargava, P.; Dewey, B. E.; Mowry, E. M.; Fitzgerald, K. C.

2026-05-26 neurology 10.64898/2026.05.21.26353780 medRxiv
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Background: Progressive multiple sclerosis (MS) is characterized by ongoing neurodegeneration and limited therapeutic options. Circulating metabolites provide insight into disease biology, yet biomarkers that predict disability progression and reflect treatment response are lacking. We aimed to identify metabolomic signatures associated with longitudinal MRI measures of brain atrophy and to evaluate whether ibudilast treatment was associated with metabolite trajectories over time. Methods: We repeatedly profiled 1,726 plasma metabolites using untargeted UPLC-MS/MS in 244 participants from the 96-week SPRINT-MS randomized trial of oral ibudilast, up to 100 mg daily, versus placebo. Weighted gene co-expression network analysis was used to derive groups of related metabolites. Associations between baseline metabolite groups and longitudinal MRI outcomes were evaluated using linear mixed-effects models adjusted for demographic, clinical, and treatment covariates. The primary outcome was the rate of whole-brain atrophy measured by brain parenchymal fraction (BPF), defined as the proportion of intracranial volume occupied by brain tissue. Secondary outcomes included white matter fraction (WMF), gray matter fraction (GMF), and cortical thickness (CTH). Metabolite groups nominally associated with MRI outcomes, defined as p < 0.05, were followed by individual metabolite analyses to identify potential drivers. Significant metabolites were tested for replication in a comparable real-world observational HEAL-MS cohort with longitudinal MRI data. Lastly, we tested whether ibudilast treatment was associated with metabolite trajectories and performed metabolite set enrichment analysis. Findings: Higher baseline levels of glycerophospholipids were associated with slower decline in both BPF and WMF, and sphingomyelins were similarly associated with slower BPF decline. For example, higher 1-palmityl-2-stearoyl-GPC (O-16:0/18:0) levels were associated with slower BPF decline in SPRINT-MS (beta = 0.016 [95% CI: 0.008, 0.024]; p = 4.35 x 10^-5) and replicated in HEAL-MS (beta = 0.108 [95% CI: 0.006, 0.211]; p = 3.90 x 10^-2). Metabolites associated with GMF preservation were enriched in androgenic steroids and steroid sulfates, with consistent positive associations observed in the replication cohort, whereas metabolites inversely associated with CTH were predominantly xenobiotic-related. Ibudilast treatment was associated with increased sphingomyelin species, such as palmitoyl sphingomyelin (d18:1/16:0; beta = 0.185 [95% CI: 0.085, 0.286]; FDR = 1.79 x 10^-2), and decreased levels of amino acid-related metabolites, such as anthranilate (beta = -0.270 [95% CI: -0.403, -0.137]; FDR = 3.87 x 10^-2). Pathway-based analyses corroborated these findings, highlighting glycerophospholipid and sphingolipid metabolism as key pathways implicated in brain atrophy in MS. Interpretation: Distinct lipid subsets were associated with slower brain atrophy in people with MS, and ibudilast treatment was associated with metabolite alterations in potentially neuroprotective directions. Metabolomics may provide prognostic and pharmacodynamic biomarkers for progressive MS.

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Consumer Opinions, Lot-to-Lot Variability, and Pharmacokinetics of Transdermal Melatonin Products: A Randomized, Crossover Clinical Trial

Bonilla, K.; Sherman, V. M.; Arbaiza, A. S.; Dougherty, M.; Olson, L. E.

2026-05-29 pharmacology and therapeutics 10.64898/2026.05.27.26354234 medRxiv
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In some countries, melatonin is sold without a physician prescription and dosage is unregulated. Transdermal products have become popular including those marketed for children. We measured consumer assumptions about these products among adult residents of the United States, analyzed lot-to-lot variability, and compared the pharmacokinetics of melatonin administered in oral, lotion, and bath product forms. Survey respondents (n=199) believed oral melatonin was more effective than transdermal products and that all melatonin products were relatively safe. Melatonin lotion products analyzed by HPLC displayed lot-to-lot variability as well as changes in formulation and product claims. To determine pharmacokinetics, three different treatments (oral tablets, lotion, and bath immersion) were administered to twelve undergraduate participants in a randomized, crossover design. Five additional participants completed bath product treatment only. Participants collected saliva samples up to 48 hours after administration, which were analyzed for melatonin by enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Oral (n=11) and lotion formulations (n=12) caused maximum salivary melatonin levels within 30 minutes after administration, but bath immersion did not cause increases in saliva melatonin (n=17). The half-life of oral melatonin was 1.17 [0.69 -- 1.65] hours versus 5.72 [3.75 -- 7.68] hours for lotion treatment (p = 0.011, effect size r = 0.770). Melatonin lotion may pose a risk to consumers who assume it is safe and less effective than oral tablets, when in fact it may be very potent and remain at high physiological levels into the following day. This study is registered on clinicaltrials.gov (NCT06382610) and was funded by the Sleep Research Society.

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Life Beyond the Forensic Unit: A Systematic Review and Meta-analysis of Patient Reoffending, Hospital Readmission, and Mortality Rates Following Discharge to the Community

McLauchlan, J.; Marr, C.; Kemp, R.; Dean, K.

2026-05-29 forensic medicine 10.64898/2026.05.27.26354062 medRxiv
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Forensic patients often have complex and costly healthcare needs, even following discharge from secure care. However, little is known about their health and justice outcomes after community reintegration. To address this gap in the literature, we conducted a systematic review and meta-analysis to estimate the incidence of key post-discharge outcomes among community-discharged forensic patients, including any reoffending, violent reoffending, reconvictions, readmissions, all-cause mortality, and suicide. We systematically searched PsycINFO, Embase, CINAHL, Medline, PubMed, and ProQuest Dissertations from database inception to May 2025 (PROSPERO CRD42024529265). Random-effect meta-analyses were used to generate pooled incidence estimates, with heterogeneity quantified using prediction intervals. A total of 49 studies met inclusion criteria (total patient n = 18,871) and contributed to the meta-analyses. The pooled incidence rate per 100,000 person-years was: any reoffending 3,889 (95% CI 2,055, 7,359; 95% PI 290, 52,136); violent reoffending 1,851 (95% CI 1,229, 2,789; 95% PI 201, 17,068); reconvictions 3,291 (95% CI 2,591, 4,179; 95% PI 950, 11,394); readmissions 7,945 (95% CI 5,507, 11,463; 95% PI 1,225, 51,548); all-cause mortality 1,789 (95% CI 1,341, 2,388; 95% PI 673, 4,756); and suicide 407 (95% CI 319, 519; 95% PI 225, 735). Overall, the reoffending rate for forensic patients discharged to the community was lower than that reported for other cohorts of people charged with general and violent offences. However, despite typically receiving long admission periods, discharged forensic patients continue to experience high rates of readmission, all-cause mortality, and suicide relative to other psychiatric patient groups in the community. Together, our findings highlight a need for enhanced post-discharge suicide support for forensic patients living in the community to better facilitate successful, long-term reintegration.

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Transcranial sonography reveals striatal neurodegeneration in female XDP-causing variant carriers

Pauly, M. G.; Diesta, C. C. E.; Cataniag, P.; Borsche, M.; Ong, J.; Kleinz, T.; Uter, J.; Oropilla, J. Q. L.; Brand, M.; Algodon, S. M.; Klein, C.; Westenberger, A.; Brueggemann, N.

2026-05-29 neurology 10.64898/2026.05.27.26354192 medRxiv
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Objectives: X-linked dystonia-parkinsonism is a neurodegenerative movement disorder with predominant striatal pathology in affected males, who frequently show hyperechogenicity of the lentiform nucleus on transcranial sonography. We aim to investigate female mutation carriers and female healthy controls using transcranial sonography to identify potential abnormalities in the striatum, substantia nigra, and ventricular system. Methods: We examined 81 participants (35 female mutation carriers and 46 female controls) using transcranial sonography to assess the presence of hyperechogenicity of the lentiform nucleus, the area of substantia nigra hyperechogenicity, and the widths of the lateral and third ventricles. Clinical evaluation focused on dystonic and parkinsonian symptoms, and we determined genotypes relevant for four X-linked dystonia-parkinsonism genetic modifiers. Results: Female mutation carriers showed more subtle parkinsonian signs compared with controls. The prevalence of hyperechogenicity of the lentiform nucleus was higher in female mutation carriers and was associated with a more unfavorable genetic modifier profile. No relevant abnormalities were observed in the substantia nigra or the ventricular system. Imbalanced X-chromosome inactivation in favor of the wildtype allele expression was not significantly associated with clinical severity or hyperechogenicity of the lentiform nucleus frequency, although female mutation carriers with such an imbalance showed no parkinsonian signs and only rarely hyperechogenicity of the lentiform nucleus (1/8, 13%). Conclusions: Women carrying the X-linked dystonia-parkinsonism-causing variant display subtle parkinsonian signs and frequently exhibit hyperechogenicity of the lentiform nucleus, supporting hyperechogenicity of the lentiform nucleus as a sensitive imaging marker of early neurodegenerative change, especially in those with higher genetic risk.

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Evaluating the Clinical Impact of CYP2C19 and CYP2D6 on Amitriptyline Outcomes in a Real-World Chronic Pain Cohort

Uckac, B.; Ceja, Z.; Ogonowski, N. S.; Lind, P.; Nyholt, D.; Martin, N.; Medland, S.; Renteria, M. E.; Ferreira, G.

2026-06-01 genetic and genomic medicine 10.64898/2026.05.28.26354228 medRxiv
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Amitriptyline is commonly prescribed for chronic pain, yet treatment response and tolerability vary substantially. Genetic variation in CYP2C19 and CYP2D6 influences amitriptyline metabolism, but evidence linking pharmacogene status to clinical outcomes in chronic pain is limited. Amitriptyline is typically prescribed for chronic pain at lower doses than for depression, which may reduce pharmacogenomic effects on clinical outcomes. We analysed 1,146 participants with chronic pain from the Australian Genetics of Depression Study who reported amitriptyline use, treatment outcomes, and genotype data. Metaboliser phenotypes were assigned using PharmCAT. Associations with self-reported effectiveness and discontinuation due to side effects were examined using regression models adjusted for age and sex. Only CYP2C19 intermediate metabolisers showed nominally lower odds of discontinuation and reduced likelihood of reporting moderate effectiveness. Overall, pharmacogenetic phenotypes were not significantly associated with patient-reported amitriptyline outcomes in chronic pain, potentially reflecting the lower doses typically prescribed for pain management.

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The effects of Natalizumab Treatment on Astrocyte Metabolism in Multiple Sclerosis: A Longitudinal 11C-acetate PET study

Kato, H.; Koda, T.; Takahashi, H.; Kurimoto, K.; Kinoshita, M.; Shimizu, M.; Yamamura, R.; Koizumi, N.; Sano, I.; Suzuki, Y.; Tanaka, A.; Isohashi, K.; Tomiyama, N.; Okuno, T.

2026-06-01 neurology 10.64898/2026.05.22.26353552 medRxiv
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Objective Astrocyte activation is increasingly recognized as an important component of multiple sclerosis (MS) pathology. Natalizumab (NTZ), a highly effective therapy for relapsing-remitting MS (RRMS), primarily blocks leukocyte trafficking into the central nervous system. However, its effects on astrocytic metabolism remain unclear. We investigated astrocyte-associated metabolic changes after NTZ treatment using quantitative 1-11C-acetate positron emission tomography (PET). Methods Seven patients with RRMS underwent quantitative 1-11C-acetate PET before and after NTZ treatment. PET-derived k2, an index of oxidative acetate metabolism, was analyzed voxel-wise and within GM and white-matter volumes of interest. Clinical status and brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings were assessed, and cognitive performance was evaluated using Rao's Brief Repeatable Battery of Neuropsychological Tests. Results After NTZ treatment, k2 decreased in all patients compared with pretreatment levels. Both gray and white matter showed significant reductions, and voxel-based analysis demonstrated widespread decreases across cortical and subcortical regions of the cerebrum and cerebellum, with no regions showing significant posttreatment increases. MRI showed no worsening; Expanded Disability Status Scale scores were stable or improved, and cognitive performance was generally stable, with improvements in selected subtests. Interpretation Quantitative 1-11C-acetate PET demonstrated a whole-brain reduction in astrocyte-associated metabolism after NTZ treatment in RRMS, most prominently in gray matter. NTZ may modulate astrocyte activity, in addition to its established effects on peripheral immune cell trafficking.

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Selective Molecular and Network Architecture Features Underlie Brain Cortical Atrophy in Dementia with Lewy Bodies

Delva, A.; Joza, S.; Tremblay, C.; Vo, A.; Filiatrault, M.; Carrier, M.; Taylor, J.-P.; O'Brien, J. T.; Firbank, M.; Thomas, A.; Donaghy, P. C.; Camicioli, R.; Chertkow, H.; Dagher, A.; Postuma, R. B.; Rahayel, S.

2026-05-27 neurology 10.64898/2026.05.26.26354105 medRxiv
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BACKGROUND: Dementia with Lewy bodies shares clinical and pathological features with both Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease, but the local biological factors that render specific cortical regions vulnerable to atrophy remain poorly defined. In particular, it is unclear whether cortical thinning in dementia with Lewy bodies reflects generic neurodegenerative mechanisms, processes shared with Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease, or dementia with Lewy bodies-specific molecular and network susceptibilities. METHODS: A total of 89 patients with dementia with Lewy bodies and 89 matched controls underwent T1-weighted brain MRI. Scans were processed to generate surface-based cortical thickness maps. Regional cortical thickness estimates, after slice-by-slice manual correction, were mapped to gene expression data from healthy postmortem human brains to identify transcriptomic signatures associated with decreased thickness in dementia with Lewy bodies. We assessed whether genes whose expression was increased with regional thinning converged onto established Parkinson's disease- and Alzheimer's disease-related pathways and isolated genes uniquely implicated in dementia with Lewy bodies. Spatial annotation mapping was then used to test whether patterns of cortical thinning overlapped with in vivo neurotransmitter system distributions and whether the observed thickness pattern was constrained by large-scale structural connectivity, consistent with a network-based propagation process. RESULTS: Cortical thinning predominated in regions that, in the healthy brain, show higher expression of genes involved in mitochondrial function and synaptic transmission. The transcriptomic profile associated with thinning significantly overlapped with genes belonging to Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease pathways, supporting shared pathogenic mechanisms across Lewy body and Alzheimer-type neurodegeneration. However, 90 genes associated with cortical thinning did not overlap with Parkinson's disease or Alzheimer's disease pathways and were enriched for GABAergic signalling. Spatial mapping analyses showed that regions with greatest thickness reductions colocalized with GABAA, serotoninergic 5-HT1A, 5-HT1B, 5-HT4, and dopaminergic D2 receptor distributions, and that the thickness pattern followed structural connectivity. CONCLUSIONS: MRI-derived cortical thickness changes in dementia with Lewy bodies reflect selective molecular and network vulnerabilities rather than a non-specific degenerative process. Mitochondrial and synaptic genes, together with a distinct GABAergic association and connectivity constraints, delineate mechanisms explaining why some cortical territories are more affected in dementia with Lewy bodies.

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Utility of the ADAS-Cog as a Cognitive Screening Tool in Older Adults with Epilepsy: A Multicenter Cohort Study

Hermann, B. P.; Kania, J.; Zawar, I.; Reyes, A.; Williams, V. J.; Sarkis, R.; Punia, V. P.; Williams, M.; Ferguson, L.; Arrotta, k.; Busch, R.; Jones, J. E.; McDonald, C.

2026-05-28 neurology 10.64898/2026.05.27.26354210 medRxiv
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Objective: Cognitive impairment is common among older adults with epilepsy, although efficient screening tools suitable for routine use are lacking. Here we examine, for the first time, the utility of the Alzheimers Disease Assessment Scale-Cognitive Subscale (ADAS-Cog) as a screening tool to identify cognitive impairment in older adults with epilepsy. Methods: Participants included 83 adults (ages over 55) with epilepsy from the Brain, Aging, and Cognition in Epilepsy (BrACE) study and 83 age-, sex-, and education-matched cognitively healthy controls from the Alzheimers Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI-3). All completed the ADAS-Cog and a comprehensive neuropsychological battery to identify cognitive phenotypes (intact vs impaired). Performance on individual ADAS-Cog items and the total score was assessed, and diagnostic efficiency statistics were determined. Results: Epilepsy participants (mean age=66.4 years) performed significantly worse across the ADAS-Cog total score and 8 of the 13 individual test items compared to controls. The largest effect sizes were observed on verbal learning and memory tasks, particularly word recall (d=0.87) and delayed word recall (d=1.06). An ADAS-Cog total score of at or exceeding 15 yielded optimal diagnostic efficiency (67.5% accuracy, 68.8% sensitivity, 66.7% specificity) for identifying cognitive impairment. Significance: The ADAS-Cog is sensitive to detecting cognitive impairment in older adults with epilepsy and may represent a scalable screening option in this population. Additional comparative studies in older epilepsy populations are needed to determine the sensitivity of this measure to longitudinal change, cross-cultural applicability, and availability across languages. Plain language summary: Cognitive decline is common among older adults with epilepsy, although sufficient evidence supporting the use of screening tools to identify cognitive impairment in this population is lacking. The ADAS-Cog may be a useful screening option in epilepsy research and clinical care, although additional studies are needed to compare it with other cognitive screening tests and to confirm its applicability for clinical care and across cultures and healthcare settings.

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Opioid crisis in Germany? Insights from a cross-sectional nationwide survey within the German drug scene.

Roehrig, J.; Sutter, L.; Witsch, N.; Rademacher, L.; Cabanis, M.

2026-06-01 addiction medicine 10.64898/2026.05.28.26354329 medRxiv
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Background and Aims: Synthetic opioids cause tens of thousands of deaths each year in North America, and there are indications that synthetic opioids are also becoming increasingly prevalent in the European drug market. This study aimed to examine high-risk substance use in the German drug-using community with a particular focus on the synthetic opioids fentanyl and nitazenes and related awareness, concerns, overdose experiences, and harm-reduction behavior. Design: Cross-sectional, observational online survey. Setting: Open drug-use scenes, addiction clinics, and substitution practices at numerous geographic locations throughout Germany, August to September 2025. Participants: 235 individuals aged 14+ from the drug using community (mean age 43.4 years; 57.9% male), 79.6% recruited by peers in open drug-use scenes. Measurements: The primary outcome was substances used within the past 12 months. In addition, sources, forms, routes of administration, and perceived changes in availability and price of (synthetic) opioids were assessed as well as risk perceptions, fears, harm-reduction behavior, and overdose-related experiences. Findings: 227 respondents reported substance use with an average of 6.2 substances, and 73.1% (95% confidence interval [CI] = 67.0-78.5%) had used at least one opioid in the past year. Synthetic opioids were consumed in many parts of Germany and across all age and gender groups. Among participants who experienced a shortage of their primary opioid in the past year, 25% (95% CI = 15.8-37.2%) reported having used fentanyl instead. 56.5% (95% CI = 36.8-74.3%) of individuals using synthetic opioids reported having experienced an overdose in the past twelve months. Most of the respondents perceived synthetic opioids as posing a high risk, and a substantial proportion expressed fear that they could be mixed into their own substances. However, only 9.9% (95% CI = 6.6-14.7%) use drug checking, although the vast majority stated they would use it if it were available to them. Conclusions: Synthetic opioids, including fentanyl and nitazenes, have entered the German drug scene, with users reporting high rates of overdose and limited access to harm reduction measures. Germany may be in an early phase of a synthetic opioid transition, warranting urgent expansion of surveillance, naloxone distribution, and drug checking services.

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Twelve-Month Outcomes of Intrathecal Vesemnogene Lantuparvovec for Spinal Muscular Atrophy in Children Younger than 24 Months in Low- and Middle- Income Countries

Ngu, L. H.; Mo, Q.; Li, S.; Toh, T. H.; Lee, J. N.; Lim, K. C.; Tehuteru, E. S.; Lestari, R.; Sanguansermsri, C.; Abueita, H.; Gwer, S.; Li, L.; Wang, Z.; Kirmani, S.; Chen, J. X.; Cai, Y. Y.; Zheng, N. N.; Yang, S. Y.; Liang, P. J.; Li, Y.; Lu, M.; Tang, Y.; Li, Y.; Ye, J. Z.; Shi, S. J.; Hong, J. F.; Chen, A. Y.; Zheng, C. K.; Wang, S.; Lim, T.-O.; Lahn, B. T.; Gao, A. T.

2026-05-30 genetic and genomic medicine 10.64898/2026.05.27.26354188 medRxiv
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Introduction Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is a monogenic neuromuscular disease caused by mutations in the survival motor neuron 1 (SMN1) gene. Onasemnogene abeparvovec is a U.S. FDA-approved single-dose gene therapy for SMA. Both its intravenous formulation (Zolgensma, approximately USD 2.13 million per patient) and intrathecal formulation (Itvisma, around USD 2.59 million per patient) are prohibitively expensive, substantially limiting accessibility in low- and middle-income countries (LMICs). We conducted a clinical study of vesemnogene lantuparvovec, an alternative to onasemnogene abeparvovec developed for use in LMIC settings. Methods Sixteen patients with SMA, including 8 with type 1 SMA and 8 with type 2 SMA, received a single intrathecal administration of vesemnogene lantuparvovec. Eleven patients were treated with a low dose (1.5 * 10^14 vg) and five with a high dose (3.0 * 10^14 vg). The primary endpoints were safety and efficacy, assessed by changes from baseline in developmental gross motor milestones according to the World Health Organization criteria. Overall survival was primarily evaluated in type 1 SMA patients. This trial was registered with ClinicalTrials.gov NCT06288230. Results As of the March 2026 cutoff date, 15 of 16 treated patients had completed at least 12 months of follow-up after treatment, while the remaining one type 1 SMA patient died of disease progression at month 6 post-treatment. At 12 months post-treatment, among the surviving 7 patient with type 1 SMA, the median age was 21.6 months (range, 16.1 to 32.3 months). Among the 16 treated patients, the median age at diagnosis was 4.4 months (range, 0.0 to 18.0 months), and the median age at dosing was 10.7 months (range, 2.8 to 22.5 months). All patients experienced at least one AE. Thirty-one AESIs were reported in 13 patients, including hepatotoxicity, thrombocypenia-related events and cardiac events. No patient required prolonged prednisolone prophylaxis. SAEs, including pneumonia, lower respiratory tract infection, upper respiratory tract infection, and haemorrhagic diarrhoea, occurred in 5 of 8 (63%) patients with type 1 SMA and 2 of 8 (25%) patients with type 2 SMA. Two patients with type 1 SMA required invasive ventilation, and one of whom subsequently died. At 12 months post-treatment, 11 of 16 treated patients (69%) gained at least one new WHO motor milestone versus baseline, including 3 type 1 and 8 type 2 SMA patients; one type 2 patient gained six WHO motor milestones and achieved independent walking. Conclusions In patients younger than 24 months of age with type 1 or type 2 SMA, a single intrathecal dose of vesemnogene lantuparvovec was safe and generally well tolerated and was associated with improvements in developmental gross motor milestones compared with outcomes observed among referred but untreated patients. Additional studies are required to further evaluate the long-term safety and efficacy of this gene therapy.

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Microscopic fractional anisotropy MRI differences in genetic frontotemporal dementia

So, I.; Rios-Carrillo, R.; Coleman, K. K. L.; Finger, E. C.; Baron, C. A.

2026-05-26 neurology 10.64898/2026.05.25.26354046 medRxiv
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ABSTRACT INTRODUCTION: Microscopic fractional anisotropy ({micro}FA), an emerging diffusion MRI metric, may be more sensitive than conventional metrics to gray matter microstructural changes in neurodegeneration. This pilot study compared {micro}FA, mean diffusivity (MD), and volume between genetic frontotemporal dementia (FTD) variant carriers and non-carriers in the insula, frontal pole, and medial orbitofrontal cortex (mOFC). METHODS: Carriers and familial non-carriers of FTD variants in C9orf72, GRN, or MAPT were scanned between October 2024-December 2025. Non-parametric aligned rank transform ANCOVAs were computed to analyze between-group differences in {micro}FA, MD, and volume while controlling for age. RESULTS: Carriers (n=12) exhibited lower insula {micro}FA than non-carriers (n=8): F(1,19)=5.89, 95% CI [-10.7,-0.75], p=0.027, 2p=0.26. No group-differences were observed in other metrics, including MD and volume. DISCUSSION: Reduced {micro}FA in the insula, a region vulnerable to early atrophy in FTD, may be more sensitive to early microstructural changes in genetic FTD than traditional diffusivity measures.

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Targeted Connectomic Neuromodulation of the Orbitofrontal Cortex To Treat Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder

Anderson, E.; Kist, A.; Simon, Z. D.; Raj, J.; Ray, S.; Astudillo, D.; Becker, N.; Norbu, T.; Khim, S.; Lambert, D.; Alvarez, J.; Kadlec, K.; Allawala, A. B.; Tremblay-McGaw, A.; Verhein, J.; Racine, C.; Naldec, P.; Alhourani, A.; Piper, K.; Fan, J.; Wang, D. D.; Khambhatti, A. N.; Sellers, K. K.; Starr, P. A.; Sugrue, L. P.; Chang, E. F.; Krystal, A. D.; Lee, A. M.

2026-05-28 psychiatry and clinical psychology 10.64898/2026.05.26.26354163 medRxiv
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Pathological activity within frontal cortical circuits is common in many neuropsychiatric disorders, such as obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). We developed an invasive brain mapping protocol in which temporary electrodes are implanted in candidate sites to identify personalized stimulation targets that can acutely relieve OCD symptoms. We found that stimulation within segments of the anterior limb of the internal capsule (ALIC) focally suppressed the structurally and functionally connected region of prefrontal and cingulate cortex. By leveraging the topographic organization of the ALIC, we reversibly inactivated frontal cortical sites with ALIC stimulation to determine which cortical regions are necessary for sustaining OCD symptoms. Stimulation of ventral capsule (VC) near the globus pallidus within the ALIC was associated with suppression of lateral orbitofrontal cortex activity and acute and long-term improvements in OCD symptoms. These results provide a paradigm for leveraging ALIC topography to deliver targeted connectomic neuromodulation to frontal cortex to treat neuropsychiatric disorders.

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Regional excitability, not epileptic pathology, drives stimulation-evoked interictal spike increases

Aguila, C. A.; Zhou, Z.; Lavelle, S. B.; Ojemann, W. K. S.; Kim, J.; Walsh, K.; Mournani, S. S.; Lucas, A.; Sinha, N.; Feys, O.; Scheid, B. H.; Davis, K. A.; Litt, B.; Conrad, E. C.

2026-05-26 neurology 10.64898/2026.05.21.26353811 medRxiv
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Objective: Interictal spikes have been proposed as a biomarker for both localizing seizure onset zones (SOZ) and tracking changes in seizure risk with neurostimulation in patients with drug-resistant epilepsy. Electrical stimulation can modulate spike rates acutely, and it has been proposed that measuring this modulation can help localize the SOZ. However, it is unclear whether stimulation-induced spike rate changes reflect epilepsy-specific pathology in the stimulated network or simply intrinsic regional excitability, which limits our understanding of their utility in epilepsy surgery planning. Methods: We analyzed low-frequency stimulation (LFS; 1 Hz) applied during a clinical seizure-induction protocol systematically targeting multiple brain regions in 43 patients with drug-resistant epilepsy undergoing intracranial EEG monitoring. A validated, automated spike detector was used to quantify pre-, during-, and post-stimulation spike rates. We tested whether the stimulation-evoked spike rate response (i) tracks the expected change in seizure risk from a seizure induction protocol, (ii) varies with anatomical stimulation site and epilepsy localization, (iii) localizes the SOZ beyond baseline spike rate, and (iv) is accompanied by changes in spike morphology. Results: Nearby LFS acutely increased spike rates in high-spiking channels (inter-stimulation median 2.25 vs. during-stimulation 4.25 spikes/min; p < 0.001), with effects attenuating with distance and resolving within approximately 30 seconds of stimulation offset. Mesial temporal lobe stimulation produced the largest increase in nearby spike rates relative to temporal neocortex and other cortex (Kruskal-Wallis p = 0.003), but this effect did not differ between patients with and without mesial temporal lobe epilepsy. A random forest classifier incorporating stimulation-evoked modulation features achieved an AUC of 0.787, comparable to a resting-state spike model (AUC 0.747; DeLong p = 0.81), indicating that stimulation-evoked spike changes do not add localizing information beyond resting-state spike rates. Stimulation produced a small but significant shift in spike morphology toward broader, higher-amplitude discharges (PERMANOVA p < 0.001), consistent with recruitment of a broader neuronal population. Significance: LFS-evoked increases in interictal spike rates reflect intrinsic regional excitability, greatest in the mesial temporal lobe, rather than epilepsy-specific pathology, and do not improve SOZ localization over resting-state spike rates. These results argue against using the change in spikes with stimulation to localize the SOZ. On the other hand, the transient spike rate increase induced by a pro-epileptic protocol supports the acute change in spike rate as a biomarker of the effect of stimulation on seizure risk, with potential to guide parameter selection for epilepsy neuromodulation.