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Temporoparietal Atrophy May Be Specific Marker for AD


 

BALTIMORE — Atrophy in the temporoparietal cortex might be a common identifier of Alzheimer's disease patients that differentiates individuals who have atypical clinical presentations of the disease from those who have other types of dementia, according to a small MRI scanning study.

Patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) who do not show its typical clinical characteristics—loss of episodic memory, executive dysfunction, language dysfunction, and visuospatial and perceptual deficits—are usually diagnosed with a frontotemporal dementialike syndrome, progressive aphasia syndrome, or a corticobasal syndrome characterized by asymmetric, extrapyramidal, and cortical dysfunction. However, patients with those symptoms most frequently have a type of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD), Dr. Keith A. Josephs said at the annual meeting of the American Neurological Association.

Differentiating AD from other dementias is important if future treatments for AD differ from FTLD, “which is likely, given the fact that the proteins that are deposited in Alzheimer's disease differ from the ones in FTLD,” said Dr. Josephs of the department of neurology at the Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minn.

To predict AD pathology in patients who present with a range of atypical AD clinical syndromes, Dr. Josephs and his colleagues looked at the gross structure of the brain with volumetric MR imaging.

They found 14 patients at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester who had a diagnosis of atypical AD dementia. These patients were evaluated by a behavioral neurologist and determined not to have a typical presentation of AD but were pathologically confirmed to have a high-probability diagnosis of AD according to National Institute on Aging–Reagan Institute Consensus Conference criteria (Braak stage V or VI).

Of the 14 patients with atypical AD, 6 had aphasic dementia, 5 had a corticobasal syndrome, and 3 had a clinical diagnosis of behavioral-variant frontotemporal degeneration. Dr. Josephs and his associates compared the atypical AD patients with 14 patients with pathologically diagnosed FTLD who had the same clinical dementia syndromes.

They also compared the atypical AD patients with 14 patients who had both the typical clinical symptoms and pathological signs of AD and 20 healthy control patients.

In each group, patients had a mean age of about 64 years at disease onset with a mean of 3.4 years from disease onset to the time of the MRI scan. Half of the patients in each group were women.

In comparisons between the groups, both typical AD and FTLD patients had more hippocampal atrophy than did atypical AD patients. The atypical AD patients showed more putamenal atrophy than did typical AD patients. The atypical AD patients also had more temporoparietal atrophy than did the FTLD patients.

Patterns of atrophy also tended to vary across the dementia syndrome subtypes found among the atypical AD patients when compared with the healthy control patients, but all of the atypical AD patients had temporoparietal atrophy in common.

In individual analyses of each patient, typical AD and FTLD patients had significantly more hippocampal atrophy than did individual atypical AD patients.

However, individuals with either typical or atypical AD had significantly more temporoparietal atrophy than did FTLD patients. The pattern of atrophy was not driven by one clinical dementia subtype.

In discriminating atypical AD from FTLD, volume loss from the hippocampus gave an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC) of 0.74, compared with 0.81 for the temporoparietal cortex. The ratio of hippocampal to temporoparietal volume loss provided the best result with an AUC of 0.93.

The study was funded by grants from the National Institutes of Health and the Robert H. and Clarice Smith and Abigail Van Buren Alzheimer's Disease Research Program of the Mayo Foundation. Dr. Josephs had no disclosures to report.

The medial temporal lobes are relatively spared in atypical AD, compared with typical AD and FTLD.

Source Courtesy Jennifer Whitwell, Ph.D.

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