Back to Search Start Over

Neuroimaging correlates with neuropathologic schemes in neurodegenerative disease

Authors :
Val J. Lowe
Scott A. Przybelski
Bradley F. Boeve
David T.W. Jones
Joseph E. Parisi
Matthew L. Senjem
Melissa E. Murray
Kejal Kantarci
Clifford R. Jack
Ronald C. Petersen
Emily S. Lundt
David S. Knopman
Dennis W. Dickson
Sabrina M. Albertson
Source :
Alzheimers Dement
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Wiley, 2019.

Abstract

Introduction Neuroimaging biomarkers are important for early diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease, and comparing multimodality neuroimaging to autopsy data is essential. Methods We compared the pathologic findings from a prospective autopsy cohort (n = 100) to Pittsburgh compound B PET (PiB-PET), 18 F-fluorodeoxyglucose PET (FDG-PET), and MRI. Correlations between neuroimaging biomarkers and neuropathologic schemes were assessed. Results PiB-PET showed strong correlations with Thal amyloid phase and Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer's Disease score and categorized 44% of Thal phase 1 participants as positive. FDG-PET and MRI correlated modestly with Braak tangle stage in Alzheimer's type pathology. A subset of participants with “none” or “sparse” neuritic plaque scores had elevated PiB-PET signal due to diffuse amyloid plaque. Participants with findings characterized as “suspected non-Alzheimer's pathophysiology” represented 15% of the group. Discussion PiB-PET is associated with Alzheimer's disease, neuritic plaques, and diffuse plaques. FDG-PET and MRI have modest correlation with neuropathologic schemes. Participants with findings characterized as suspected non-Alzheimer's pathophysiology most commonly had primary age-related tauopathy.

Details

ISSN :
15525279 and 15525260
Volume :
15
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Alzheimer's & Dementia
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....31509108eea35d6cf1d4b00a94813a92