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Amyloid involvement in subcortical regions predicts cognitive decline

Authors
Cho, Soo HyunShin, Jeong-HyeonJang, HyeminPark, SeongbeomKim, Hee JinKim, Si EunKim, Seung JooKim, YeshinLee, Jin SanNa, Duk L.Lockhart, Samuel N.Rabinovici, Gil D.Seong, Joon-KyungSeo, Sang Won
Issue Date
12월-2018
Publisher
SPRINGER
Keywords
Amyloid staging; Amyloid PET; Alzheimer' s dementia; Thal staging
Citation
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE AND MOLECULAR IMAGING, v.45, no.13, pp.2368 - 2376
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
Journal Title
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE AND MOLECULAR IMAGING
Volume
45
Number
13
Start Page
2368
End Page
2376
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/71440
DOI
10.1007/s00259-018-4081-5
ISSN
1619-7070
Abstract
PurposeWe estimated whether amyloid involvement in subcortical regions may predict cognitive impairment, and established an amyloid staging scheme based on degree of subcortical amyloid involvement.MethodsData from 240 cognitively normal older individuals, 393 participants with mild cognitive impairment, and 126 participants with Alzheimer disease were acquired at Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative sites. To assess subcortical involvement, we analyzed amyloid deposition in amygdala, putamen, and caudate nucleus. We staged participants into a 3-stage model based on cortical and subcortical amyloid involvement: 382 with no cortical or subcortical involvement as stage 0, 165 with cortical but no subcortical involvement as stage 1, and 203 with both cortical and subcortical involvement as stage 2.ResultsAmyloid accumulation was first observed in cortical regions and spread down to the putamen, caudate nucleus, and amygdala. In longitudinal analysis, changes in MMSE, ADAS-cog 13, FDG PET SUVR, and hippocampal volumes were steepest in stage 2 followed by stage 1 then stage 0 (p value <0.001). Stage 2 showed steeper changes in MMSE score ( [SE]=-0.02 [0.004], p<0.001), ADAS-cog 13 (0.05 [0.01], p<0.001), FDG PET SUVR (-0.0008 [0.0003], p=0.004), and hippocampal volumes (-4.46 [0.65], p<0.001) compared to stage 1.ConclusionsWe demonstrated a downward spreading pattern of amyloid, suggesting that amyloid accumulates first in neocortex followed by subcortical structures. Furthermore, our new finding suggested that an amyloid staging scheme based on subcortical involvement might reveal how differential regional accumulation of amyloid affects cognitive decline through functional and structural changes of the brain.
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