Corneal confocal microscopy differentiates patients with Parkinson’s disease with and without autonomic involvement

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Ning-Ning Che
Shuai Chen
Qiu-Huan Jiang
Si-Yuan Chen
Zhen-Xiang Zhao
Xue Li
Rayaz A. Malik
Jian-Jun Ma
Hong-Qi Yang
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[1] Henan University,Department of Neurology, Henan Provincial People’s Hospital, School of Clinical Medicine
[2] Affiliated BenQ Hospital of Nanjing Medical University,Department of Neurology
[3] Weill Cornell Medicine-Qatar,Department of Medicine
[4] University of Manchester,Division of Cardiovascular Sciences, School of Medical Sciences
[5] Zhengzhou University,Department of Neurology, People’s Hospital of Zhengzhou University, School of Clinical Medicine
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Autonomic dysregulation in Parkinson’s disease (PD) can precede motor deficits and is associated with reduced quality of life, disease progression, and increased mortality. Objective markers of autonomic involvement in PD are limited. Corneal confocal microscopy (CCM) is a rapid ophthalmic technique that can quantify small nerve damage in a range of peripheral and autonomic neuropathies. Here we investigated whether CCM can be used to assess autonomic symptoms in PD. Based on the scale for outcomes in Parkinson’s disease for autonomic symptoms (SCOPA-AUT), patients with PD were classified into those without autonomic symptoms (AutD-N), with single (AutD-S), and multiple (AutD-M) domain autonomic dysfunction. Corneal nerve fiber pathology was quantified using CCM, and the relationship with autonomic symptoms was explored. The study enrolled 71 PD patients and 30 control subjects. Corneal nerve fiber density (CNFD), corneal nerve branch density (CNBD), corneal nerve fiber length (CNFL), and CNBD/CNFD ratio were lower in PD patients with autonomic symptoms compared to those without autonomic symptoms. Autonomic symptoms correlated positively with CNFD (r = −0.350, p = 0.004), and were not related to Levodopa equivalent daily dose (r = 0.042, p = 0.733) after adjusting for age, disease severity, disease duration or cognitive function. CCM parameters had high sensitivity and specificity in distinguishing patients with PD with and without autonomic symptoms. PD patients with autonomic symptoms have corneal nerve loss, and CCM could serve as an objective ophthalmic imaging technique to identify patients with PD and autonomic symptoms.
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