TY - JOUR
T1 - HMPAO-SPECT Can Discriminate between Patients with Subjective Cognitive Complaints with and without Cognitive Deficits and those with Mild Cognitive Impairment
AU - Rossini, Fabio
AU - Zauner, Harald
AU - Bergmann, Jürgen
AU - Kronbichler, Martin
AU - Spindler, I
AU - Golaszewski, S
AU - Trinka, Eugen
AU - Staffen, Wolfgang
N1 - Copyright© Bentham Science Publishers; For any queries, please email at [email protected].
PY - 2019
Y1 - 2019
N2 - BACKGROUND: Growing evidence suggests that pathological processes leading to Alzheimer's disease occurs gradually and begins to develop decades before the earliest clinical symptoms occur. The use of biomarkers has been proposed to detect evidence of preclinical Alzheimer's pathologic change in asymptomatic subjects. Subjective cognitive complaints (SCC) i.e. self-reported cognitive decline with normal cognition have been reported as an indicator of future cognitive decline, however, this condition is unspecific.OBJECTIVE: In the present study we used the regional brain perfusion measured by HMPAO-SPECT as Biomarker of neurodegeneration to compare the regional brain perfusion of patient with subjective cognitive complaints with and without minimal cognitive dysfunction (SCC+ and SCC- respectively) in respect to patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI).METHODS: We retrospectively examined 736 Patients who referred to our Memory Clinic because of suspected cognitive dysfunction. After exclusion of patients with overt dementia, automated, quantitatively assessed relative cerebral blood flow of 10 forebrain regions (thalamus, parietotemporal, medial temporal, posterior temporal, posterior cingulate gyrus, each region left hemispheric and right hemispheric) and neuropsychological assessment of 64 SCC (32 SCC+; 32 SCC-) and 28 MCI subjects were analysed.RESULTS: .The most relevant differences between groups in cognitive performance concerned verbal memory. Left hemispheric medial temporal region could significantly discriminate between all three groups, with a progressive decrease n perfusion from SCC towards MCI. Area under the curve of left medial temporal region showed a sensitivity of 0,61 and a specificity of 0,78 for discriminating MCI from SCC.CONCLUSION: Automated analysis of HMPAO-SPECT data of MCI and SCC+ patients showed significant perfusion differences in medial temporal region and impaired verbal memory, both of which are known features of Alzheimer's disease. Perfusion patterns and verbal memory performance in SCC+ are more similar to MCI than SCC-. Thus, SPECT analysis could distinguish those subjects whose perfusion pattern resembles that of an MCI from those who do not. In our opinion, this could identify two populations with a different risk of progression to AD, with SCC+ subjects needing further diagnostic examination and repeated follow-up.
AB - BACKGROUND: Growing evidence suggests that pathological processes leading to Alzheimer's disease occurs gradually and begins to develop decades before the earliest clinical symptoms occur. The use of biomarkers has been proposed to detect evidence of preclinical Alzheimer's pathologic change in asymptomatic subjects. Subjective cognitive complaints (SCC) i.e. self-reported cognitive decline with normal cognition have been reported as an indicator of future cognitive decline, however, this condition is unspecific.OBJECTIVE: In the present study we used the regional brain perfusion measured by HMPAO-SPECT as Biomarker of neurodegeneration to compare the regional brain perfusion of patient with subjective cognitive complaints with and without minimal cognitive dysfunction (SCC+ and SCC- respectively) in respect to patients with mild cognitive impairment (MCI).METHODS: We retrospectively examined 736 Patients who referred to our Memory Clinic because of suspected cognitive dysfunction. After exclusion of patients with overt dementia, automated, quantitatively assessed relative cerebral blood flow of 10 forebrain regions (thalamus, parietotemporal, medial temporal, posterior temporal, posterior cingulate gyrus, each region left hemispheric and right hemispheric) and neuropsychological assessment of 64 SCC (32 SCC+; 32 SCC-) and 28 MCI subjects were analysed.RESULTS: .The most relevant differences between groups in cognitive performance concerned verbal memory. Left hemispheric medial temporal region could significantly discriminate between all three groups, with a progressive decrease n perfusion from SCC towards MCI. Area under the curve of left medial temporal region showed a sensitivity of 0,61 and a specificity of 0,78 for discriminating MCI from SCC.CONCLUSION: Automated analysis of HMPAO-SPECT data of MCI and SCC+ patients showed significant perfusion differences in medial temporal region and impaired verbal memory, both of which are known features of Alzheimer's disease. Perfusion patterns and verbal memory performance in SCC+ are more similar to MCI than SCC-. Thus, SPECT analysis could distinguish those subjects whose perfusion pattern resembles that of an MCI from those who do not. In our opinion, this could identify two populations with a different risk of progression to AD, with SCC+ subjects needing further diagnostic examination and repeated follow-up.
KW - Aged
KW - Brain/diagnostic imaging
KW - Cerebrovascular Circulation
KW - Cognition Disorders/diagnostic imaging
KW - Diagnosis, Differential
KW - Diagnostic Self Evaluation
KW - Female
KW - Humans
KW - Image Interpretation, Computer-Assisted
KW - Male
KW - Memory
KW - Neuropsychological Tests
KW - Nickel
KW - Oximes
KW - Pattern Recognition, Automated
KW - Radiopharmaceuticals
KW - Retrospective Studies
KW - Titanium
KW - Tomography, Emission-Computed, Single-Photon
UR - https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/31453786/
U2 - 10.2174/1567205016666190827115138
DO - 10.2174/1567205016666190827115138
M3 - Article
C2 - 31453786
SN - 1567-2050
VL - 16
SP - 843
EP - 851
JO - Current Alzheimer Research
JF - Current Alzheimer Research
IS - 9
ER -