Dopaminergic sub-network connectivity alterations are associated with postoperative cognitive dysfunction: results from the BioCog cohort study
Authors
- Florian Lammers-Lietz
- Friedrich Borchers
- Insa Feinkohl
- Cicek Kanar
- Henning Krampe
- Gregor Lichtner
- Jayanth Sreekanth
- Janine Wiebach
- Martin Weygandt
- Claudia Spies
- Georg Winterer
- Friedemann Paul
Journal
- medRxiv
Citation
- medRxiv
Abstract
Postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) is a detrimental complication after surgery with lasting impact on the patients’ daily life. It is most common after postoperative delirium. Dopaminergic dysfunction has been suggested to play a role in delirium, but little knowledge exists regarding its relevance for POCD. We hypothesized that POCD is associated with altered resting-state functional connectivity of the ventral tegmental area (VTA) and the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNc) in functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) before surgery and at postoperative follow-up after three months.
Patients ≥65 years old underwent resting-state fMRI and neuropsychological assessment before major elective surgery and at follow-up three months later. POCD was determined as the reliable change index. Connectivity between VTA or SNc and 132 regions were calculated. Principal component analysis (PCA) was used for sub-network construction, and components explaining >5% of variance were retained for analysis. To study postoperative changes in patients with POCD, we applied the same transformation to postoperative connectivity, and multi-factor analysis. Regression analyses were used to describe connectivity alterations while adjusting for age, sex, MMSE, surgery and anaesthesia. Of 214 patients, 26 (12%) developed POCD. Among 132 principal components, four components for VTA- and SNc-FC were selected for further analysis. For both VTA and SNc connectivity, one component was significantly associated with POCD. Postoperative alterations of dopaminergic networks were observed in an exploratory voxel-wise analysis in a left temporal cluster. Higher dopaminergic connectivity to regions associated with spatial perceptive processes and lower connectivity to cognitive control-related areas may predispose to POCD.