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Clinicopathologic and (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B implications of Thal amyloid phase across the Alzheimer’s disease spectrum

Thal amyloid phase, which describes the pattern of progressive amyloid-β plaque deposition in Alzheimer’s disease, was incorporated into the latest National Institute of Ageing – Alzheimer’s Association neuropathologic assessment guidelines. Amyloid biomarkers (positron emission tomography and cereb...

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Autores principales: Murray, Melissa E., Lowe, Val J., Graff-Radford, Neill R., Liesinger, Amanda M., Cannon, Ashley, Przybelski, Scott A., Rawal, Bhupendra, Parisi, Joseph E., Petersen, Ronald C., Kantarci, Kejal, Ross, Owen A., Duara, Ranjan, Knopman, David S., Jack, Clifford R., Dickson, Dennis W.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4407190/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25805643
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awv050
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author Murray, Melissa E.
Lowe, Val J.
Graff-Radford, Neill R.
Liesinger, Amanda M.
Cannon, Ashley
Przybelski, Scott A.
Rawal, Bhupendra
Parisi, Joseph E.
Petersen, Ronald C.
Kantarci, Kejal
Ross, Owen A.
Duara, Ranjan
Knopman, David S.
Jack, Clifford R.
Dickson, Dennis W.
author_facet Murray, Melissa E.
Lowe, Val J.
Graff-Radford, Neill R.
Liesinger, Amanda M.
Cannon, Ashley
Przybelski, Scott A.
Rawal, Bhupendra
Parisi, Joseph E.
Petersen, Ronald C.
Kantarci, Kejal
Ross, Owen A.
Duara, Ranjan
Knopman, David S.
Jack, Clifford R.
Dickson, Dennis W.
author_sort Murray, Melissa E.
collection PubMed
description Thal amyloid phase, which describes the pattern of progressive amyloid-β plaque deposition in Alzheimer’s disease, was incorporated into the latest National Institute of Ageing – Alzheimer’s Association neuropathologic assessment guidelines. Amyloid biomarkers (positron emission tomography and cerebrospinal fluid) were included in clinical diagnostic guidelines for Alzheimer’s disease dementia published by the National Institute of Ageing – Alzheimer’s Association and the International Work group. Our first goal was to evaluate the correspondence of Thal amyloid phase to Braak tangle stage and ante-mortem clinical characteristics in a large autopsy cohort. Second, we examined the relevance of Thal amyloid phase in a prospectively-followed autopsied cohort who underwent ante-mortem (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B imaging; using the large autopsy cohort to broaden our perspective of (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B results. The Mayo Clinic Jacksonville Brain Bank case series (n = 3618) was selected regardless of ante-mortem clinical diagnosis and neuropathologic co-morbidities, and all assigned Thal amyloid phase and Braak tangle stage using thioflavin-S fluorescent microscopy. (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B studies from Mayo Clinic Rochester were available for 35 participants scanned within 2 years of death. Cortical (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B values were calculated as a standard uptake value ratio normalized to cerebellum grey/white matter. In the high likelihood Alzheimer’s disease brain bank cohort (n = 1375), cases with lower Thal amyloid phases were older at death, had a lower Braak tangle stage, and were less frequently APOE-ε4 positive. Regression modelling in these Alzheimer’s disease cases, showed that Braak tangle stage, but not Thal amyloid phase predicted age at onset, disease duration, and final Mini-Mental State Examination score. In contrast, Thal amyloid phase, but not Braak tangle stage or cerebral amyloid angiopathy predicted (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B standard uptake value ratio. In the 35 cases with ante-mortem amyloid imaging, a transition between Thal amyloid phases 1 to 2 seemed to correspond to (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B standard uptake value ratio of 1.4, which when using our pipeline is the cut-off point for detection of clear amyloid-positivity regardless of clinical diagnosis. Alzheimer’s disease cases who were older and were APOE-ε4 negative tended to have lower amyloid phases. Although Thal amyloid phase predicted clinical characteristics of Alzheimer’s disease patients, the pre-mortem clinical status was driven by Braak tangle stage. Thal amyloid phase correlated best with (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B values, but not Braak tangle stage or cerebral amyloid angiopathy. The (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B cut-off point value of 1.4 was approximately equivalent to a Thal amyloid phase of 1–2.
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spelling pubmed-44071902015-06-26 Clinicopathologic and (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B implications of Thal amyloid phase across the Alzheimer’s disease spectrum Murray, Melissa E. Lowe, Val J. Graff-Radford, Neill R. Liesinger, Amanda M. Cannon, Ashley Przybelski, Scott A. Rawal, Bhupendra Parisi, Joseph E. Petersen, Ronald C. Kantarci, Kejal Ross, Owen A. Duara, Ranjan Knopman, David S. Jack, Clifford R. Dickson, Dennis W. Brain Original Articles Thal amyloid phase, which describes the pattern of progressive amyloid-β plaque deposition in Alzheimer’s disease, was incorporated into the latest National Institute of Ageing – Alzheimer’s Association neuropathologic assessment guidelines. Amyloid biomarkers (positron emission tomography and cerebrospinal fluid) were included in clinical diagnostic guidelines for Alzheimer’s disease dementia published by the National Institute of Ageing – Alzheimer’s Association and the International Work group. Our first goal was to evaluate the correspondence of Thal amyloid phase to Braak tangle stage and ante-mortem clinical characteristics in a large autopsy cohort. Second, we examined the relevance of Thal amyloid phase in a prospectively-followed autopsied cohort who underwent ante-mortem (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B imaging; using the large autopsy cohort to broaden our perspective of (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B results. The Mayo Clinic Jacksonville Brain Bank case series (n = 3618) was selected regardless of ante-mortem clinical diagnosis and neuropathologic co-morbidities, and all assigned Thal amyloid phase and Braak tangle stage using thioflavin-S fluorescent microscopy. (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B studies from Mayo Clinic Rochester were available for 35 participants scanned within 2 years of death. Cortical (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B values were calculated as a standard uptake value ratio normalized to cerebellum grey/white matter. In the high likelihood Alzheimer’s disease brain bank cohort (n = 1375), cases with lower Thal amyloid phases were older at death, had a lower Braak tangle stage, and were less frequently APOE-ε4 positive. Regression modelling in these Alzheimer’s disease cases, showed that Braak tangle stage, but not Thal amyloid phase predicted age at onset, disease duration, and final Mini-Mental State Examination score. In contrast, Thal amyloid phase, but not Braak tangle stage or cerebral amyloid angiopathy predicted (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B standard uptake value ratio. In the 35 cases with ante-mortem amyloid imaging, a transition between Thal amyloid phases 1 to 2 seemed to correspond to (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B standard uptake value ratio of 1.4, which when using our pipeline is the cut-off point for detection of clear amyloid-positivity regardless of clinical diagnosis. Alzheimer’s disease cases who were older and were APOE-ε4 negative tended to have lower amyloid phases. Although Thal amyloid phase predicted clinical characteristics of Alzheimer’s disease patients, the pre-mortem clinical status was driven by Braak tangle stage. Thal amyloid phase correlated best with (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B values, but not Braak tangle stage or cerebral amyloid angiopathy. The (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B cut-off point value of 1.4 was approximately equivalent to a Thal amyloid phase of 1–2. Oxford University Press 2015-05 2015-03-20 /pmc/articles/PMC4407190/ /pubmed/25805643 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awv050 Text en © The Author (2015). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution Non-Commercial License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/), which permits non-commercial re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. For commercial re-use, please contact journals.permissions@oup.com
spellingShingle Original Articles
Murray, Melissa E.
Lowe, Val J.
Graff-Radford, Neill R.
Liesinger, Amanda M.
Cannon, Ashley
Przybelski, Scott A.
Rawal, Bhupendra
Parisi, Joseph E.
Petersen, Ronald C.
Kantarci, Kejal
Ross, Owen A.
Duara, Ranjan
Knopman, David S.
Jack, Clifford R.
Dickson, Dennis W.
Clinicopathologic and (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B implications of Thal amyloid phase across the Alzheimer’s disease spectrum
title Clinicopathologic and (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B implications of Thal amyloid phase across the Alzheimer’s disease spectrum
title_full Clinicopathologic and (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B implications of Thal amyloid phase across the Alzheimer’s disease spectrum
title_fullStr Clinicopathologic and (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B implications of Thal amyloid phase across the Alzheimer’s disease spectrum
title_full_unstemmed Clinicopathologic and (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B implications of Thal amyloid phase across the Alzheimer’s disease spectrum
title_short Clinicopathologic and (11)C-Pittsburgh compound B implications of Thal amyloid phase across the Alzheimer’s disease spectrum
title_sort clinicopathologic and (11)c-pittsburgh compound b implications of thal amyloid phase across the alzheimer’s disease spectrum
topic Original Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4407190/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25805643
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/brain/awv050
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