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Effects of amyloid and vascular markers on cognitive decline in subcortical vascular dementia.

Authors :
Ye BS
Seo SW
Kim JH
Kim GH
Cho H
Noh Y
Kim HJ
Yoon CW
Woo SY
Kim SH
Park HK
Kim ST
Choe YS
Lee KH
Kim JS
Oh SJ
Kim C
Weiner M
Lee JH
Na DL
Source :
Neurology [Neurology] 2015 Nov 10; Vol. 85 (19), pp. 1687-93. Date of Electronic Publication: 2015 Oct 14.
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

Objective: To determine the independent and synergistic effects of amyloid and small vessel disease (SVD) burden on longitudinal cognitive decline in patients with subcortical vascular dementia (SVaD).<br />Methods: A longitudinal cohort study was conducted involving patients from outpatient clinics of 2 tertiary referral centers. Sixty-one patients with SVaD were prospectively recruited and underwent MRI, 11C-Pittsburgh compound B (PiB) PET at baseline, and a 3-year annual neuropsychological follow-up. Effects of PiB positivity and SVD markers (white matter hyperintensities [WMH], lacunes, and microbleeds) on longitudinal cognitive decline were evaluated using generalized estimation equation after controlling for age, sex, education, APOE4 allele, and follow-up interval.<br />Results: When individual neuropsychological tests were used as outcome measures, PiB positivity was associated with faster cognitive decline in attention, visuospatial, visual memory, and global cognition function. Higher WMH burden was associated with faster cognitive decline in attention, visuospatial, visual recognition memory, and semantic/phonemic fluency function, whereas lacunes and microbleeds had no significant effects. When global dementia rating (Clinical Dementia Rating sum of boxes) was considered as an outcome measure, however, only PiB positivity was associated with faster cognitive decline. Significant interactions between PiB positivity and higher SVD burden were found to affect cognitive decline in semantic word fluency (from WMH burden) and global dementia rating (from microbleed burden).<br />Conclusions: In SVaD patients, amyloid burden, independently or interactively with SVD, contributed to longitudinal cognitive decline. Amyloid deposition was the strongest poor prognostic factor.<br /> (© 2015 American Academy of Neurology.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1526-632X
Volume :
85
Issue :
19
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
26468407
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000002097