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In vivo staging of regional amyloid deposition predicts functional conversion in the preclinical and prodromal phases of Alzheimer's disease.

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2020-03-17

Authors

Teipel, Stefan J
Dyrba, Martin
Chiesa, Patrizia A
Sakr, Fatemah
Jelistratova, Irina
Lista, Simone
Vergallo, Andrea
Lemercier, Pablo
Cavedo, Enrica
Habert, Marie Odile

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Abstract

We tested the usefulness of a regional amyloid staging based on amyloid sensitive positron emission tomography to predict conversion to cognitive impairment and dementia in preclinical and prodromal Alzheimer's disease (AD). We analyzed 884 cases, including normal controls, and people with subjective cognitive decline or mild cognitive impairment (MCI), from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative with a maximum follow-up of 6 years and 318 cases with subjective memory complaints with a maximum follow-up time of three years from the INveStIGation of AlzHeimer's PredicTors cohort (INSIGHT-preAD study). Cox regression showed a significant association of regional amyloid stages with time to conversion from a cognitively normal to an MCI, and from an MCI to a dementia status. The most advanced amyloid stages identified very-high-risk groups of conversion. All results were robustly replicated across the independent samples. These findings indicate the usefulness of regional amyloid staging for identifying preclinical and prodromal AD cases at very high risk of conversion for future amyloid targeted trials.

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MeSH Terms

Alzheimer Disease
Amyloidogenic Proteins
Cognitive Dysfunction
Cohort Studies
Follow-Up Studies
Longitudinal Studies
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Positron-Emission Tomography
Proportional Hazards Models
Risk
Time Factors

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Keywords

Amyloid, Dementia, Longitudinal study, MCI, Subjective cognitive decline

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