MRI and CSF biomarkers in normal, MCI, and AD subjects: predicting future clinical change

P Vemuri, H J Wiste, S D Weigand, L M Shaw, J Q Trojanowski, M W Weiner, D S Knopman, R C Petersen, C R Jack Jr, Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, P Vemuri, H J Wiste, S D Weigand, L M Shaw, J Q Trojanowski, M W Weiner, D S Knopman, R C Petersen, C R Jack Jr, Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative

Abstract

Objective: To investigate the relationship between baseline MRI and CSF biomarkers and subsequent change in continuous measures of cognitive and functional abilities in cognitively normal (CN) subjects and patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) and Alzheimer disease (AD) and to examine the ability of these biomarkers to predict time to conversion from aMCI to AD.

Methods: Data from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, which consists of CN, aMCI, and AD cohorts with both CSF and MRI, were used. Baseline CSF (t-tau, Abeta(1-42), and p-tau(181P)) and MRI scans were obtained in 399 subjects (109 CN, 192 aMCI, 98 AD). Structural Abnormality Index (STAND) scores, which reflect the degree of AD-like features in MRI, were computed for each subject.

Results: Change on continuous measures of cognitive and functional performance was modeled as average Clinical Dementia Rating-sum of boxes and Mini-Mental State Examination scores over a 2-year period. STAND was a better predictor of subsequent cognitive/functional change than CSF biomarkers. Single-predictor Cox proportional hazard models for time to conversion from aMCI to AD showed that STAND and log (t-tau/Abeta(1-42)) were both predictive of future conversion. The age-adjusted hazard ratio for an interquartile change (95% confidence interval) of STAND was 2.6 (1.7, 4.2) and log (t-tau/Abeta(1-42)) was 2.0 (1.1, 3.4). Both MRI and CSF provided information about future cognitive change even after adjusting for baseline cognitive performance.

Conclusions: MRI and CSF provide complimentary predictive information about time to conversion from amnestic mild cognitive impairment to Alzheimer disease and combination of the 2 provides better prediction than either source alone. However, we found that MRI was a slightly better predictor of future clinical/functional decline than the CSF biomarkers tested.

Figures

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/instance/2715214/bin/znl0280967960001.jpg
Figure 1 Estimated average value of Clinical Dementia Rating–sum of boxes score (CDR-SB) over time by diagnosis group for the 25th, 50th, and 75th percentiles of each biomarker or baseline CDR-SB after accounting for baseline age The percentiles for each biomarker are calculated within group. Curves assume a baseline age of 75 years for cognitively normal (CN), 75 years for amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI), and 76.5 years for Alzheimer disease (AD), the median values observed in our sample. STAND = Structural Abnormality Index
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/instance/2715214/bin/znl0280967960002.jpg
Figure 2 Estimated survivorship functions by quartiles based on age-adjusted Cox proportional hazard models modeling the imaging or CSF predictor with a restricted cubic spline with 3 knots Estimates assume a subject age of 75 years at baseline. AD = Alzheimer disease; STAND = Structural Abnormality Index

Source: PubMed

3
Sottoscrivi