| Literature DB >> 20807454 |
Prashanthi Vemuri1, Clifford R Jack.
Abstract
Atrophy measured on structural magnetic resonance imaging (sMRI) is a powerful biomarker of the stage and intensity of the neurodegenerative aspect of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology. In this review, we will discuss the role of sMRI as an AD biomarker by summarizing (a) the most commonly used methods to extract information from sMRI images, (b) the different roles in which sMRI can be used as an AD biomarker, and (c) comparisons of sMRI with other major AD biomarkers.Entities:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20807454 PMCID: PMC2949589 DOI: 10.1186/alzrt47
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alzheimers Res Ther Impact factor: 6.982
Figure 1Proposed Alzheimer's disease pathological cascade based on biomarkers. MCI, mild cognitive impairment. Modified and reproduced with permission from [6].
Figure 2Progressive atrophy (medial temporal lobes) in an older cognitively normal (CN) subject, an amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) subject, and an Alzheimer's disease (AD) subject.
Summary of combined magnetic resonance imaging and cerebrospinal fluid studies in Alzheimer's disease
| Study | Subjects | Diagnostic measures | Associations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Schönknecht | 88 AD, 17 CN | In AD, CSF tau was not correlated to MRI. | |
| Wahlund and Blennow, 2003 [ | 23 MCI, 24 AD | At baseline, CSF Aβ1-42 was correlated with MRI. During the follow-up period, increases in tau and p-tau correlated with ventricular increase. | |
| de Leon | 32 stable CN, 13 CN progressed to MCI | Accuracy for prediction of CN progression to MCI: Baseline: MRI: 78%; CSF: 78% to 89%. | Hippocampal volume decrease correlates with P-tau231 increase and Aβ1-42 decrease. |
| Hampel | 22 AD | CSF p-tau231 correlated with baseline hippocampus and rates of hippocampal atrophy. | |
| Schoonenboom | 39 MCI | CSF Aβ1-42 was correlated with MRI and not tau. | |
| de Leon | 9 CN, 7 MCI | Accuracy for separation of CN and MCI: Baseline: MRI: 94%, CSF: 63% to 88%; MRI + CSF: 94% Longitudinal: MRI: 88%; CSF: 73% to 88%; MRI + CSF: 94% | In MCI, longitudinal hippocampal volume decrease correlated with P-tau231 increase and Aβ1-42 decrease. |
| Herukka | 21 MCI, of whom 8 progressed to AD | In all MCI, increases in tau and p-tau correlated with a decrease in hippocampal volumes. | |
| Schoonenboom | 32 CN, 61 AD | Odds ratio between AD and CN: MRI: 28; CSF: 57 | There were no correlations between visual assessment of MRI and CSF biomarkers within CN and AD. |
| Sluimer | 23 CN, 9 MCI, 47 AD | In AD, CSF p-tau181 had mild association with whole-brain atrophy rate. Only MRI was associated with change in cognitive measures. | |
| Brys | 21 CN, 16 stable MCI, 8 MCI progressed to AD | Accuracy for prediction of MCI progression to AD: MRI: 74%; CSF: 70%; MRI + CSF: 84% | There were no longitudinal correlations between MRI and CSF. |
| Chou | 80 CN, 80 MCI, 80 AD (ADNI) | CSF Aβ1-42 was correlated with ventricular expansion. | |
| Fagan | 69 CN, 29 mild AD | In CN, decrease in CSF Aβ1-42 correlated with brain atrophy. In mild AD, increases in CSF t-tau and p-tau181 correlated with brain atrophy. | |
| Henneman | 19 CN, 25 MCI, 31 AD | Baseline CSF p-tau181 was independently associated with subsequent disease progression, measured by hippocampal atrophy rate. | |
| Leow | 40 CN, 40 MCI, 20 AD (ADNI) | Baseline CSF correlated with temporal atrophy rates over the course of 12 months. | |
| Schuff | 112 CN, 226 MCI, 96 AD (ADNI) | In MCI, an increase in rates of hippocampal atrophy correlated with lower CSF Aβ1-42. | |
| Thomann | 15 CN, 23 MCI (AACD), 16 AD | Increases in CSF t-tau and p-tau181 correlated with cortical atrophy in temporal, parietal, and frontal regions. | |
| Vemuri | 109 CN, 192 aMCI, 98 AD (ADNI) | AUROC separating CN, aMCI, and AD: MRI: 0.77; CSF: 0.68 to 0.73; MRI + CSF: 0.81 | Within each clinical group, only MRI correlated with cognition in aMCI and AD groups. |
| Vemuri | 109 CN, 192 aMCI, 98 AD (ADNI) | Proportional hazards for predicting time to conversion from aMCI to AD: MRI: 2.6; CSF: 1.7 to 2.0 | Baseline MRI was a better predictor of subsequent cognitive and functional decline than baseline CSF was. |
| Vemuri | 92 CN, 149 MCI, 71 AD (ADNI) | Sample size required to detect treatment effects in AD: MRI: 100; CSF >105. | Longitudinal annual changes were observed only in MRI and not in CSF. Change in MRI was associated with change in cognitive measures. |
| Walhovd | 42 CN, 73 MCI, 38 AD (ADNI) | Accuracy for baseline separation of CN and AD: MRI: 85%; CSF: 81.2%; CSF + MRI: 88.8% | In MCIs, only baseline MRI and FDG were correlated to (or predictive of) future clinical decline during 2 years. |
| Fjell | 71 CN | Below a certain threshold, baseline CSF Aβ1-42 correlated with ventricular increase and volumetric brain decrease over the course of 1 year. | |
| Fjell | Baseline: 105 CN, 175 MCI, 90 AD (ADNI) | In MCI and AD, baseline CSF measures were not related to baseline MRI but were related to longitudinal atrophy. Baseline MRI predicted change in cognition better than CSF did. |
Search terms were 'MRI and CSF and Alzheimer's'. AACD, age-associated cognitive decline; AD, Alzheimer's disease; ADNI, Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative; aMCI, amnestic mild cognitive impairment; AUROC, area under the receiver operating characteristic; CN, cognitively normal; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; FDG, fluoro-deoxy-glucose; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging.
Summary of combined magnetic resonance imaging and fluoro-deoxy-glucose studies in Alzheimer's disease
| Study | Subjects | Diagnostic measures | Associations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Yamaguchi | 13 AD, 13 CN | Hippocampal volume and mean cortical cerebral glucose metabolic rates of the temporal lobe, temporo-parieto-occipital, and frontal regions were correlated. | |
| De Santi | 11 CN, 15 MCI, 12 AD | Accuracy for separation of MCI and CN: MRI: 73%; FDG: 73% to 85% AD and CN: MRI: 83%; FDG: 100% | FDG and MRI measures in hippocampal formation best characterize MCI, and additional neocortical damage best characterizes AD. |
| Ishii | 30 CN, 30 very mild AD | VBM: decrease in MRI in medial temporal lobes and decrease in FDG in posterior cingulate and parietal lobule | |
| Kawachi | 60 CN, 30 very mild AD, 32 mild AD | Accuracy for separating very mild AD and CN: FDG: 89%; MRI: 83%; MRI + FDG: 94% | VBM: decrease in MRI in bilateral amygdala/hippocampus complex and decrease in FDG in bilateral posterior cingulate and parietotemporal area |
| Mosconi | 7 CN, 7 asymptomatic at-risk FAD | Accuracy for separation of both groups: MRI: 43% to 86%; FDG: 50% to 100% | FDG showed significant decrease but little sMRI change in asymptomatic subjects. |
| Ishii | 20 very mild AD, 20 DLB, 20 CN | Accuracy for separation of DLB and AD: MRI: 62% to 80%; FDG: 66% to 87% | Both MRI and FDG had a hippocampal decrease due to AD. |
| Matsunari | Group 1: 40 CN, 27 AD Group 2 (early- and late-onset): 50 CN, 34 AD | Accuracy for different comparisons: MRI: 74% to 92%; FDG: 92% to 100% | VBM: decrease in MRI in hippocampal complex and decrease in FDG in posterior cingulate and parietotemporal area |
| Samuraki | 73 CN, 39 AD | VBM: FDG uptake was preserved in the medial temporal lobe before as well as after correction with MRI. | |
| Chetelat | 15 CN, 18 mild AD | FDG hypometabolism exceeds MRI atrophy in the posterior cingulate-precuneus, orbitofrontal, inferior temporo-parietal, parahippocampal, angular, and fusiform areas. Similar degrees of atrophy and hypometabolism were observed in the hippocampus. | |
| Hinrichs | CN and AD subjects from ADNI: MRI: 183, FDG: 149 | AUROC for discrimination of AD and CN: MRI: 0.88; FDG: 0.87 | |
| Walhovd | 22 CN, 44 MCI | MRI predicted diagnostic groups for most regions of interest, but PET did not, except a trend for the precuneus metabolism. | |
| Yuan | Meta-analysis of 24 MCI studies (1112 subjects) | Odds ratio of predicting MCI conversion to AD: MRI: 10.6; FDG: 40.1 | FDG was better than MRI in predicting conversion of MCI to AD. |
| Morbelli | 12 CN, 11 stable MCI, 9 MCI who progressed to AD | MCI converters showed MRI changes in left parahippocampus and both thalami, whereas FDG showed MRI changes in left PCC, precuneus, superior parietal lobule. | |
| Walhovd | 42 CN, 73 MCI, 38 AD (ADNI) | Accuracy for baseline separation of AD and CN: MRI: 85%; FDG: 82.5% | MRI and FDG were largely overlapping in value for discrimination. |
Search terms were 'MRI and FDG and Alzheimer's'. AD, Alzheimer's disease; ADNI, Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative; AUROC, area under the receiver operating characteristic; CN, cognitively normal; DLB, dementia with Lewy bodies; FAD, familial Alzheimer's disease; FDG, fluoro-deoxy-glucose; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PCC, posterior cingulate cortex; PET, positron emission tomography; VBM, voxel-based morphometry.
Summary of combined magnetic resonance imaging and Pittsburgh compound B studies in Alzheimer's disease
| Study | Subjects | Associations |
|---|---|---|
| Archer | 9 AD | Positive correlation between rates of whole-brain atrophy and regional PIB uptake |
| Jack | 20 CN, 17 MCI, 8 AD | aProportional odds to separate all groups: PIB: 0.75; MRI: 0.84; MRI + PIB: 0.86. Global PIB and MRI were correlated with each other as well as with clinical measures. |
| Jack | 21 CN, 32 MCI, 8 AD | Longitudinal annual change was observed only in MRI and not in PIB. Change in MRI was associated with change in cognitive measures. |
| Mormino | 37 CN, 39 PIB + MCI | PIB and MRI were correlated with each other as well as with episodic memory. |
| Scheinin | 13 CN, 14 AD | During 2 years, only longitudinal MRI change was observed but not in PIB. |
| Strorandt | 135 CN | PIB was associated with cross-sectional brain atrophy and longitudinal cognitive decline. |
| Bourgeat | 92 CN, 32 MCI, 35 AD | In CN, PIB retention in the inferior temporal region and hippocampal volume were strongly correlated. |
| Chetalat | 94 CN (49 subjective cognitive impairment), 34 MCI, 35 AD | Global atrophy and regional atrophy were strongly related to PIB load in CN subjects with subjective cognitive impairment but not MCI and AD. |
| Driscoll | 57 CN | In CN, current PIB load was not related to longitudinal MRI changes in the preceding years. |
Search terms were 'MRI and PIB and Alzheimer's'. aDiagnostic accuracy. AD, Alzheimer's disease; CN, cognitively normal; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PIB, Pittsburgh compound B.