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BACKGROUND: In the Oxford Haemodynamic Adaptation to Reduce Pulsatility trial (OxHARP), sildenafil increased cerebrovascular reactivity but did not reduce cerebral pulsatility, a marker of vascular aging. This analysis of OxHARP tested whether these potentially causative mechanisms were independently associated with severity of white matter hyperintensities (WMH). AIMS: To determine independence of the relationship between severity of white matter hyperintensities with both cerebral pulsatility and cerebrovascular reactivity in the same population. METHODS: OxHARP was a double-blind, randomised, placebo-controlled, crossover trial of phosphodiesterase inhibitors in patients with mild-moderate WMH and previous minor cerebrovascular events. It determined effects on cerebrovascular pulsatility and reactivity on transcranial ultrasound, and reactivity on MRI. Associations were determined between baseline ultrasound measures, and averaged MRI measures across follow-up, with severity of WMH on clinical imaging (Fazekas or modified Blennow scores) and WMH volume in the MRI substudy, by ordinal and linear regression. RESULTS: In 75/75 patients (median 70 years, 78% male), cerebral pulsatility was associated with age (p<0.001) whereas reactivity on ultrasound was not (p=0.29). Severity of WMH in all participants was independently associated with decreased cerebrovascular reactivity and increased cerebral pulsatility (pulsatility p=0.016; reactivity p=0.03), with a trend to a synergistic interaction (p=0.075). Reactivity on ultrasound was still associated with WMH after further adjustment for age (p=0.017) but pulsatility was not (p=0.31). Volume of WMH in the MRI substudy was also independently associated with both markers on ultrasound (pulsatility p=0.005; reactivity p=0.029), and was associated with reduced cerebrovascular reactivity within WMH on MRI (p<0.0001). CONCLUSIONS: WMH are independently associated with cerebral pulsatility and reactivity, representing complementary potential disease mechanisms and treatment targets. TRIAL REGISTRATION: clinicaltrials.org: https://classic.clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT03855332.

Original publication

DOI

10.1177/17474930241306987

Type

Journal article

Journal

Int J Stroke

Publication Date

30/11/2024

Keywords

Functional neuroimaging, Hypertension, Randomised controlled trial, Small vessel disease, cerebral pulsatility, cerebrovascular reactivity