Literature DB >> 20807454

Role of structural MRI in Alzheimer's disease.

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


Pathological cascade and structural magnetic resonance imaging

Alzheimer's disease (AD) is a multifaceted disease in which cumulative pathological brain insults result in progressive cognitive decline that ultimately leads to dementia. Amyloid plaques, neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs), neurodegeneration, and inflammation are the well-established pathological hallmarks of AD. A plausible model for the development of AD posits that amyloid deposition occurs early in the process but by itself does not directly cause clinical symptoms [1,2]. Neuronal and synaptic losses appear to be key determinants of cognitive impairment in AD [3,4]. If neuronal loss leads to cerebral atrophy (as is likely), then it can be expected that cognitive decline and atrophy will be closely associated. On the basis of this evidence, it has been hypothesized that AD pathological cascade is a two-stage process in which amyloidosis and neuronal pathology (tauopathy, neuronal injury, and neurodegeneration) are largely sequential rather than simultaneous processes [1,5,6]. There is also sufficient literature to support the fact that atrophy of the brain structures or neurodegeneration is the most proximate substrate of cognitive impairment in AD [2,7-9]. This hypothesis of a sequential model was proposed by Jack and colleagues [6] on the basis of biomarker data and is adapted and illustrated in Figure 1. Owing to the close relationship between neurodegeneration and cognition (as illustrated in Figure 1), atrophy measured on structural magnetic resonance imaging (sMRI) is a powerful AD biomarker.
Figure 1

Proposed Alzheimer's disease pathological cascade based on biomarkers. MCI, mild cognitive impairment. Modified and reproduced with permission from [6].

Proposed Alzheimer's disease pathological cascade based on biomarkers. MCI, mild cognitive impairment. Modified and reproduced with permission from [6]. sMRI measures brain morphometry and therefore can capture gray matter atrophy related to the loss of neurons, synapses, and dendritic de-arborization that occurs on a microscopic level in AD; white matter atrophy related to the loss of structural integrity of white matter tracts, presumably resulting from demyelination and dying back of axonal processes; and ex vacuo expansion of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) spaces. Since there is a significant negative correlation between NFT density and neuronal counts [10], sMRI indirectly reflects NFT density. It has been shown that neuronal loss correlates with but exceeds NFT density in AD and is related directly to impaired cognitive function [10]. Neuronal loss also correlates with Braak NFT stage and quantitative NFT burden, validating sMRI as an AD biomarker [11-13]. This review provides a summary of the role of sMRI as an AD biomarker. First, we begin with the most commonly used methods to extract information from sMRI images, then we discuss the different roles in which sMRI can be used as a biomarker in AD, and finally we compare the performance of sMRI to that of other major AD biomarkers.

Extracting information from structural magnetic resonance imaging

Given the large amount of data present in a three-dimensional (3D) sMRI scan, several different methods are employed to condense atrophy information in each patient's scan or assess atrophy over multiple scans of the same individual. The pattern of neurodegeneration seen using sMRI is similar to the progression of neurofibrillary pathology as described by Braak and Braak [14]. The disease usually begins and is ultimately most severe in the medial temporal lobe, particularly the entorhinal cortex and hippocampus. Later (that is, when subjects are in the clinical mild cognitive impairment [MCI] phase), the disease spreads to the basal temporal lobe and paralimbic cortical areas such as the posterior cingulate gyrus and precuneus. The onset of dementia is due to the spread of degenerative atrophy to multimodal association neocortices. Basal forebrain and the dorsal pontomesencephalic areas are also involved. However, unusual variants that do not follow this particular pattern are increasingly recognized. Furthermore, other limbic lobe structures such as posterior cingulate seem to be involved early and consistently in AD. Figure 2 shows typical MRI scans in cognitively normal (CN) subjects and in patients with MCI or AD. As can been seen in the figure, there is increasing medial temporal atrophy (specifically, the hippocampus and ventricular enlargement) in MCI and AD when compared with CN. Here, we present a brief survey of methods to extract or visualize this information (or both) from 3D sMRI scans of cross-sectional and longitudinal studies.
Figure 2

Progressive 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.

Progressive 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.

Cross-sectional methods

When changes in different individuals are measured cross-sectionally, the most widely used summary measures from sMRI are the following:

1. Visual assessment of scans

Often, visual assessment of the degree of atrophy in the medial temporal lobe is used as a metric to measure disease [15,16]. Visual assessment offers a fast and efficient way to assess MRI scans but does not capture the fine incremental grades of atrophy.

2. Quantitative region of interest-based techniques or volumetry

Volumetry is the most common cross-sectional quantitative metric used in AD. Although traditionally manual tracing of volumes was used, the increase in computational power has led to the development of automated techniques.

2a. Manual tracing

Tracing and quantifying the volume of medial temporal lobe structures (for example, the hippocampus or entorhinal cortex) or posterior cingulate have been traditionally employed in AD and provide an accurate quantitative measure of atrophy [17]. However, manual measurements can be tedious and time-consuming.

2b. Automated and semi-automated techniques

In the recent past, methods have been proposed to automatically parcellate gray matter density or cortical surfaces into regions of interest. These cortical surfaces are used to compute global as well as a regional cortical thickness (that is, combined thickness of the layers in the cerebral cortex). Because automated and semi-automated techniques do not require significant manual intervention, they are extremely useful for large-scale studies. An advantage of volumetry, such as measuring the hippocampus, is that the measurements describe a known anatomic structure that (in the case of the hippo-campus) is closely related to the pathological expression of the disease and is also functionally related to one of the cardinal early clinical symptoms - memory impairment. However, the disadvantage of using a single region of interest to consolidate 3D information as a disease metric is that it is spatially limited and does not make use of all of the available information in a 3D sMRI.

3. Quantitative voxel-based

These methods assess atrophy over the entire 3D sMRI scan.

3a. Voxel-based analytic techniques

Methods such as voxel-based morphometry (VBM) [18] have been developed to provide a powerful way to test for group-wise comparisons between cross-sectional sMRI scans of diseased group versus normal controls. The typical atrophy patterns seen in subjects with AD or MCI are similar to those of the Braak neurofibrillary staging described above. Although VBM enables visualization of the pattern of neurodegeneration due to disease, the statistical testing portion of VBM is designed only to test for group-wise differences between two groups of subjects and cannot provide a summary measure for each subject, and this makes it inapplicable to diagnosis in individual subjects.

3b. Automated individual subject diagnosis

Several investigators have recently turned their attention to multivariate analysis and machine learning-based algorithms that use the entire 3D sMRI data to form a disease model against which individual subjects may be compared. These scores typically are computed for each new incoming scan (that is, test scan) on the basis of the degree and the pattern of atrophy in comparison with the scans of a large database of well-characterized AD and cognitively normal subjects [19-22].

Longitudinal methods

Because accelerating tissue loss is a hallmark of neuro-degenerative disease, serial sMRI scans often are analyzed to measure disease progression. Even though cross-sectional measures can be employed to obtain a summary measure from sMRI at every time point, these measures have unnecessary variability due to inherent noise associated with each individual measurement. Therefore, specific techniques have been developed to extract tissue loss information from serial sMRI scans. In these techniques, all pairs of sMRI scans are registered to each other and brain loss between scans is quantified and this reduces the variability.

Global atrophy quantification

One of the earliest methods developed to quantify the global percentage change in brain volume between two scans was boundary shift integral (BSI) [23]. BSI determines the total volume through which the surface of the brain has moved between scans acquired at two time points (that is, the brain volume decreases and the volume of the ventricles increases). One of the most sensitive global measures for measuring the rates of brain atrophy is the ventricular change measure using BSI [24]. This is because the ventricular boundary on sMRI (T1-weighted images) provides a good contrast for the delineation of the ventricular surface with more accuracy when compared with brain volume and hippocampal volume.

Tensor-based morphometry

Unlike BSI, which analyzes only spatial shift in the brain surfaces, TBM provides a 3D profile of voxel-level brain degeneration. Here, the term TBM is used to describe 3D voxel-based methods that can be employed to observe how the disease progresses in the brain as a result of the underlying pathological changes [25,26].

Role of structural magnetic resonance imaging in Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment

In this section, we will briefly discuss the different roles in which sMRI can be employed as an AD biomarker. When MCI involves primarily memory complaints and deficits, it is often considered a prodromal stage of AD. Here, we will also discuss the role of sMRI in MCI in addition to AD.

1. Early diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease and mild cognitive impairment

The typical reductions of hippocampal volume in MCI with an average Mini-Mental State Exam (MMSE) score of 25 are 10% to 15% and in AD with an average MMSE score of 20 are 20% to 25% [27]. Measuring these significant reductions (due to AD) in the medial temporal lobe can be extremely useful for early diagnosis of AD and MCI. At present, diagnostic criteria for AD are based on the criteria in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV), which are based primarily on clinical and psychometric assessment and do not use quantitative atrophy information available in sMRI scans. However, there is a proposal to add reliable biomarkers to the diagnostic criteria [28]. One of the suggested features is the volume loss of medial temporal structures since measures of sMRI atrophy have accuracies of 70% to 90% in AD and 50% to 70% in amnestic MCI in distinguishing them from age-matched controls [28]. All of the above-mentioned cross-sectional methods, except 3a, can be used as diagnostic metrics for AD and MCI.

2. Predicting the risk of progression in mild cognitive impairment and cognitively normal

Although there is considerable variability of progression rates in MCI to AD, it has been observed that an average of about 10% to 15% of subjects with MCI, specifically of the amnestic type, annually progress to AD [29]. Because pathological changes occur before the onset of clinical symptoms, biomarkers can aid in the prediction of risk of progression in MCI and CN. A recent meta-analysis showed that hippocampal volume can detect an average of approximately 73% of MCI subjects who progress to AD [30]. Several studies using both cross-sectional methods 1 and 2 above have shown that atrophy seen on MRI can predict the risk of progression to AD with good accuracy.

3. Evaluating disease progression

Charting structural changes in the brain over time is important in monitoring the progression of the disease [31]. Tracking the disease progression is especially important in patients with MCI and cognitively normal subjects since atrophy rates can predict subsequent clinical progression in both groups. The metrics that are most often used for evaluating or tracking disease progression are increase in ventricular volume and decrease in brain volume over time. These measures are more sensitive than cross-sectional measures in capturing changes over time since all scans of the same subject are registered together to reduce inter-scan variability.

4. Measuring the efficacy of therapeutics

Several investigators have shown that the lower variance in the serial sMRI measurements compared with clinical measures of cognition and function could permit clinical trials to be performed with smaller sample sizes than would be possible using traditional clinical instruments [32-34]. At present, AD biomarkers have not yet been validated as surrogate endpoints for regulatory purposes and therefore cannot be used as the primary indicators of efficacy. However, the impact of interventions on these biomarkers has been evaluated in a few trials and was found to be potentially useful in capturing the pharmacodynamic effects. The efficacy of donepezil, a cholinesterase inhibitor, was evaluated using serial sMRI [35,36] and was found to possibly be neuro-protective in nature since there was some evidence for decreased disease progression on the basis of sMRI trophy. In a different study, it was observed that subjects immunized with Aβ antibody responders had a more rapid volume loss than placebo patients during a phase IIa immunotherapy trial that was prematurely terminated owing to meningoencephalitis in a subset of patients [37]. In addition to evaluating therapeutic efficacy, atrophy on sMRI can be used to select at-risk MCI subjects for clinical trials. While longitudinal methods are useful for testing efficacy of therapeutics, cross-sectional methods are most suited for sample enrichment.

5. Screening in clinical trials

MRI is routinely used at two stages in clinical trials. The first is screening at baseline for inclusion/exclusion. This includes identifying subjects with imaging evidence of conditions that are exclusionary (for example, hemispheric infarction or prior evidence of cerebral hemorrhage). Also, anti-amyloid trials commonly will exclude subjects with micro-hemorrhages that exceed a specified number. Either long echo time gradient echo or susceptibility-weighted imaging sequences are used for micro-hemorrhage identification. MRI is also used for safety screening during the study. Conditions that are of interest are evidence of new micro-hemorrhage and vasogenic edema. FLAIR (fluid-attenuated inversion recovery) and diffusion imaging are used to identify the latter condition.

6. Differential diagnosis of dementia subtypes

Given that pathology does not always map onto the clinical expression of the disease and has considerable clinical heterogeneity, biomarkers such as sMRI can aid in the differential diagnosis of dementia types. The absence of significant medial temporal lobe atrophy in dementia with Lewy bodies [38] and vascular dementia [39], significant frontal lobe atrophy in behavioral variant fronto-temporal dementia [40], or pronounced asymmetrical temporal lobe atrophy in semantic dementia [41] can be used to separate these non-AD dementias from AD. Diffusion imaging and FLAIR are useful in identifying both cerebrovascular disease and prion disease. MRI is useful in identifying structural contributors to cognitive impairment such as hemorrhage or evidence of major head trauma. Differential diagnosis of dementias using sMRI will be particularly helpful when therapeutics become readily available.

7. Mechanistic inferences into the disease process

Using sMRI as an independent biomarker of neurodegeneration aides in understanding relationships between cognition and neurodegeneration in AD. This has led to insights into disease mechanisms in AD. In the model shown in Figure 1 from Jack and colleagues [6], the conclusion that neurodegeneration is more proximately associated with cognitive decline was derived from several sMRI studies.

Comparison of structural magnetic resonance imaging with other major Alzheimer's disease biomarkers

The major AD biomarkers that are typically considered for clinical trials and observational studies are CSF Aβ1-42, CSF t-tau, fluoro-deoxy-glucose positron emission tomography (FDG-PET), Pittsburgh compound B-PET (PIB-PET), and sMRI. In this section, we will compare sMRI with other major AD biomarkers by summarizing studies that have compared sMRI with each of these biomarkers in the same set of subjects.

Structural magnetic resonance imaging and cerebrospinal fluid

Low CSF Aβ1-42 levels reflect deposition of Aβ in plaques, high CSF t-tau reflects active axonal and neuronal damage, and high p-tau reflects phosphorylated-tau and has been postulated to more closely mirror NFT formation. Several CSF and sMRI studies have compared the diagnostic and prognostic accuracy of both and have attempted to characterize the associations between the two biomarkers in the same set of subjects. We have summarized these studies in Table 1. The majority of the studies have concluded that sMRI and CSF provide independent diagnostic information and that the combination provides better discrimination of AD than either one does alone [42-44]. It has also been shown that both biomarkers are good predictors of MCI progression to AD [45-47]. However, the associations between both of the biomarkers have not been consistent across studies. While some studies claim that there is an association between CSF biomarkers (specifically t- tau and p-tau) and sMRI [42,46,48-54], others have found no association between the two [45,55-57]. This could be due mainly to the fact that measuring the biomarkers in different study populations (that is, at different stages of the disease) will provide different answers, and also there is a large variability in the methodologies used (that is, variability in the assays and sMRI measures ranging from visual assessment to automated diagnosis).
Table 1

Summary of combined magnetic resonance imaging and cerebrospinal fluid studies in Alzheimer's disease

StudySubjectsDiagnostic measuresAssociations
Schönknecht et al., 2003 [57]88 AD, 17 CNIn AD, CSF tau was not correlated to MRI.
Wahlund and Blennow, 2003 [48]23 MCI, 24 ADAt 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 et al., 2004 [46]32 stable CN, 13 CN progressed to MCIAccuracy 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 et al., 2005 [73]22 ADCSF p-tau231 correlated with baseline hippocampus and rates of hippocampal atrophy.
Schoonenboom et al., 2005 [74]39 MCICSF Aβ1-42 was correlated with MRI and not tau.
de Leon et al., 2006 [42]9 CN, 7 MCIAccuracy 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 et al., 2008 [51]21 MCI, of whom 8 progressed to ADIn all MCI, increases in tau and p-tau correlated with a decrease in hippocampal volumes.
Schoonenboom et al., 2008 [56]32 CN, 61 ADOdds ratio between AD and CN: MRI: 28; CSF: 57There were no correlations between visual assessment of MRI and CSF biomarkers within CN and AD.
Sluimer et al., 2008 [52]23 CN, 9 MCI, 47 ADIn AD, CSF p-tau181 had mild association with whole-brain atrophy rate. Only MRI was associated with change in cognitive measures.
Brys et al., 2009 [45]21 CN, 16 stable MCI, 8 MCI progressed to ADAccuracy for prediction of MCI progression to AD: MRI: 74%; CSF: 70%; MRI + CSF: 84%There were no longitudinal correlations between MRI and CSF.
Chou et al., 2009 [53]80 CN, 80 MCI, 80 AD (ADNI)CSF Aβ1-42 was correlated with ventricular expansion.
Fagan et al., 2009 [54]69 CN, 29 mild ADIn 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 et al., 2009 [49]19 CN, 25 MCI, 31 ADBaseline CSF p-tau181 was independently associated with subsequent disease progression, measured by hippocampal atrophy rate.
Leow et al., 2009 [75]40 CN, 40 MCI, 20 AD (ADNI)Baseline CSF correlated with temporal atrophy rates over the course of 12 months.
Schuff et al., 2009 [76]112 CN, 226 MCI, 96 AD (ADNI)In MCI, an increase in rates of hippocampal atrophy correlated with lower CSF Aβ1-42.
Thomann et al., 2009 [50]15 CN, 23 MCI (AACD), 16 ADIncreases in CSF t-tau and p-tau181 correlated with cortical atrophy in temporal, parietal, and frontal regions.
Vemuri et al., 2009 [43]109 CN, 192 aMCI, 98 AD (ADNI)AUROC separating CN, aMCI, and AD: MRI: 0.77; CSF: 0.68 to 0.73; MRI + CSF: 0.81Within each clinical group, only MRI correlated with cognition in aMCI and AD groups.
Vemuri et al., 2009 [47]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 2.0Baseline MRI was a better predictor of subsequent cognitive and functional decline than baseline CSF was.
Vemuri et al., 2010 [34]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 et al., 2010 [44]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 et al., 2010 [77]71 CNBelow a certain threshold, baseline CSF Aβ1-42 correlated with ventricular increase and volumetric brain decrease over the course of 1 year.
Fjell et al., 2010 [55]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 cerebrospinal fluid studies in Alzheimer's disease 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. The earlier studies concentrated mainly on the associations between CSF and sMRI biomarkers, whereas the more recent ones have started investigating the association between these biomarkers and cognition. Studies published on the basis of the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) data have shown that sMRI is more closely related to cognition than CSF biomarkers are [34,43,44,47,55], lending support to the model in Figure 1. As suggested by Wahlund and Blennow [48], CSF Aβ denotes a specific molecular pathway or etiology whereas CSF tau, p-tau, and sMRI may reflect the disease stage or intensity of AD. However, sMRI appears to be a more stable indicator of neuronal loss in comparison with the CSF measures. This may be due to the fact that brain volume quantification with sMRI has nothing analogous to daily turnover of a soluble protein measured using CSF.

Structural magnetic resonance imaging and FDG-PET

Decreased FDG-PET uptake (that is, hypo-metabolism on FDG-PET scans) reflects metabolic deficits due to synaptic dysfunction and (probably) tau-mediated neuronal injury. sMRI atrophy is seen mainly in the medial temporal lobes, whereas FDG uptake decreases are seen mainly in the posterior cingulate and parietal lobes. Studies that have investigated FDG and MRI in the same group of subjects are summarized in Table 2. Several studies have compared FDG and sMRI on the basis of diagnostic and prognostic accuracy in AD. FDG was found to provide slightly better discrimination than MRI in [58-62], and a couple of recent studies based on ADNI data found that the two have similar performance [44,63] and have largely overlapping value for discrimination [44]. However, the question of complementary or overlapping information between FDG and sMRI remains to be investigated in a large group of subjects in a systematic fashion.
Table 2

Summary of combined magnetic resonance imaging and fluoro-deoxy-glucose studies in Alzheimer's disease

StudySubjectsDiagnostic measuresAssociations
Yamaguchi et al., 1997 [78]13 AD, 13 CNHippocampal volume and mean cortical cerebral glucose metabolic rates of the temporal lobe, temporo-parieto-occipital, and frontal regions were correlated.
De Santi et al., 2001 [59]11 CN, 15 MCI, 12 ADAccuracy 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 et al., 2005 [79]30 CN, 30 very mild ADVBM: decrease in MRI in medial temporal lobes and decrease in FDG in posterior cingulate and parietal lobule
Kawachi et al., 2006 [60]60 CN, 30 very mild AD, 32 mild ADAccuracy 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 et al., 2006 [58]7 CN, 7 asymptomatic at-risk FADAccuracy 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 et al., 2007 [62]20 very mild AD, 20 DLB, 20 CNAccuracy 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 et al., 2007 [61]Group 1: 40 CN, 27 AD Group 2 (early- and late-onset): 50 CN, 34 ADAccuracy 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 et al., 2007 [80]73 CN, 39 ADVBM: FDG uptake was preserved in the medial temporal lobe before as well as after correction with MRI.
Chetelat et al., 2008 [81]15 CN, 18 mild ADFDG 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 et al., 2009 [63]CN and AD subjects from ADNI: MRI: 183, FDG: 149AUROC for discrimination of AD and CN: MRI: 0.88; FDG: 0.87
Walhovd et al., 2009 [82]22 CN, 44 MCIMRI predicted diagnostic groups for most regions of interest, but PET did not, except a trend for the precuneus metabolism.
Yuan et al., 2009 [30]Meta-analysis of 24 MCI studies (1112 subjects)Odds ratio of predicting MCI conversion to AD: MRI: 10.6; FDG: 40.1FDG was better than MRI in predicting conversion of MCI to AD.
Morbelli et al., 2010 [83]12 CN, 11 stable MCI, 9 MCI who progressed to ADMCI converters showed MRI changes in left parahippocampus and both thalami, whereas FDG showed MRI changes in left PCC, precuneus, superior parietal lobule.
Walhovd et al., 2010 [44]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 fluoro-deoxy-glucose studies in Alzheimer's disease 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.

Structural magnetic resonance imaging and PIB-PET

Although there are several amyloid imaging PET tracers based on 11C and 18F, the tracer most studied in the field of AD is PIB [64], which we discuss here. PIB-PET scans measure the deposition of Aβ in the brain (amyloid load). Since the invention of PIB, there has been significant interest in investigating the effect of Aβ plaques as measured by PIB [64] on cognition and sMRI. In this section, we will discuss studies that have investigated both PIB and sMRI in the same group of subjects. These studies are summarized in Table 3. In CN, baseline PIB was not associated with longitudinal sMRI changes in the preceding years [65] but was strongly related to brain atrophy [66,67] and future cognitive decline [66]. The majority of studies have found a correlation between baseline sMRI and PIB measures [68-70]. In addition, serial PIB and sMRI studies have found that longitudinal changes are much more pronounced on sMRI and that longitudinal change in PIB is minimal [1,71]. All of this evidence has led to our understanding that Aβ deposition measured by PIB is an upstream process whereas neurodegeneration is a downstream process that is probably initiated by Aβ deposition and is more closely related to cognitive decline [1,2].
Table 3

Summary of combined magnetic resonance imaging and Pittsburgh compound B studies in Alzheimer's disease

StudySubjectsAssociations
Archer et al., 2006 [70]9 ADPositive correlation between rates of whole-brain atrophy and regional PIB uptake
Jack et al., 2008 [69]20 CN, 17 MCI, 8 ADaProportional 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 et al., 2009 [1]21 CN, 32 MCI, 8 ADLongitudinal annual change was observed only in MRI and not in PIB. Change in MRI was associated with change in cognitive measures.
Mormino et al., 2009 [2]37 CN, 39 PIB + MCIPIB and MRI were correlated with each other as well as with episodic memory.
Scheinin et al., 2009 [71]13 CN, 14 ADDuring 2 years, only longitudinal MRI change was observed but not in PIB.
Strorandt et al., 2009 [66]135 CNPIB was associated with cross-sectional brain atrophy and longitudinal cognitive decline.
Bourgeat et al., 2010 [68]92 CN, 32 MCI, 35 ADIn CN, PIB retention in the inferior temporal region and hippocampal volume were strongly correlated.
Chetalat et al., 2010 [67]94 CN (49 subjective cognitive impairment), 34 MCI, 35 ADGlobal atrophy and regional atrophy were strongly related to PIB load in CN subjects with subjective cognitive impairment but not MCI and AD.
Driscoll et al., 2010 [65]57 CNIn 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.

Summary of combined magnetic resonance imaging and Pittsburgh compound B studies in Alzheimer's disease 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.

Conclusions and future directions in structural magnetic resonance imaging

Given that the clinical assessment is unlikely to exactly match findings at autopsy in every subject, in vivo imaging measures (such as sMRI) that reflect disease stage and intensity would be extremely useful. The value added to clinical assessment by MRI is that it is an independent non-invasive measure of neuronal loss and thus provides a supplementary measure based only on anatomy; by contrast, clinical diagnosis is done on the basis of clinical examination and neuropsychological tests. Numerous studies now show that sMRI is a stable biomarker of AD progression. Publications on sMRI data from multicenter studies such as ADNI have also provided evidence that the combination of sMRI scans from multicenter studies is possible without much penalty [72]. In addition to being of diagnostic and prognostic value, sMRI can play multiple roles, as described in this review. Three future directions still need to be thoroughly investigated. (a) The development of robust, validated, and automated techniques for extracting disease-specific information from cross-sectional and serial sMRIs needs to be investigated. (b) Because the majority of the studies discussed here were done on highly screened populations, it is important to validate the generalizability of sMRI as a biomarker in clinically based cohorts in which the presence of multiple pathologies and disorders is a norm rather than an exception. (c) How these sMRI measures can be integrated with other clinical measures, CSF, and PET biomarkers to be of clinical use needs to be investigated.

Abbreviations

3D: three-dimensional; AD: Alzheimer's disease; ADNI: Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative; BSI: boundary shift integral; CN: cognitively normal; CSF: cerebrospinal fluid; FDG: fluoro-deoxy-glucose; FDG-PET: fluoro-deoxy-glucose positron emission tomography; FLAIR: fluid-attenuated inversion recovery; MCI: mild cognitive impairment; MMSE: Mini-Mental State Exam; MRI: magnetic resonance imaging; NFT: neurofibrillary tangle; PET: positron emission tomography; PIB: Pittsburgh compound B; sMRI: structural magnetic resonance imaging; VBM: voxel-based morphometry.

Competing interests

CRJ serves as a consultant for Eli Lilly and Company (Indianapolis, IN, USA) and Elan Corporation (Dublin, Ireland) and is an investigator in clinical trials sponsored by Baxter (Deerfield, IL, USA) or Pfizer Inc. (New York, NY, USA) and holds stock in GE Healthcare (Waukesha, WI, USA). PV declares that she has no competing interests.
  81 in total

1.  Classification of structural images via high-dimensional image warping, robust feature extraction, and SVM.

Authors:  Yong Fan; Dinggang Shen; Christos Davatzikos
Journal:  Med Image Comput Comput Assist Interv       Date:  2005

2.  Physical basis of cognitive alterations in Alzheimer's disease: synapse loss is the major correlate of cognitive impairment.

Authors:  R D Terry; E Masliah; D P Salmon; N Butters; R DeTeresa; R Hill; L A Hansen; R Katzman
Journal:  Ann Neurol       Date:  1991-10       Impact factor: 10.422

3.  Decreased cerebrospinal fluid Abeta(42) correlates with brain atrophy in cognitively normal elderly.

Authors:  Anne M Fagan; Denise Head; Aarti R Shah; Daniel Marcus; Mark Mintun; John C Morris; David M Holtzman
Journal:  Ann Neurol       Date:  2009-02       Impact factor: 10.422

4.  Multicentre variability of MRI-based medial temporal lobe volumetry in Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  Stefan J Teipel; Michael Ewers; Stefanie Wolf; Frank Jessen; Heike Kölsch; Sönke Arlt; Christian Luckhaus; Peter Schönknecht; Klaus Schmidtke; Isabella Heuser; Lutz Frölich; Gabriele Ende; Johannes Pantel; Jens Wiltfang; Fabian Rakebrandt; Oliver Peters; Christine Born; Johannes Kornhuber; Harald Hampel
Journal:  Psychiatry Res       Date:  2010-05-20       Impact factor: 3.222

5.  Randomized, placebo-controlled trial of the effects of donepezil on neuronal markers and hippocampal volumes in Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  K Ranga Rama Krishnan; H Cecil Charles; P Murali Doraiswamy; Jacobo Mintzer; Richard Weisler; Xin Yu; Carlos Perdomo; John R Ieni; Sharon Rogers
Journal:  Am J Psychiatry       Date:  2003-11       Impact factor: 18.112

6.  Combining MR imaging, positron-emission tomography, and CSF biomarkers in the diagnosis and prognosis of Alzheimer disease.

Authors:  K B Walhovd; A M Fjell; J Brewer; L K McEvoy; C Fennema-Notestine; D J Hagler; R G Jennings; D Karow; A M Dale
Journal:  AJNR Am J Neuroradiol       Date:  2010-01-14       Impact factor: 3.825

7.  Partial volume effect-corrected FDG PET and grey matter volume loss in patients with mild Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  Miharu Samuraki; Ichiro Matsunari; Wei-Ping Chen; Kazuyoshi Yajima; Daisuke Yanase; Akihiko Fujikawa; Nozomi Takeda; Shintaro Nishimura; Hiroshi Matsuda; Masahito Yamada
Journal:  Eur J Nucl Med Mol Imaging       Date:  2007-05-23       Impact factor: 9.236

8.  Follow-up of [11C]PIB uptake and brain volume in patients with Alzheimer disease and controls.

Authors:  N M Scheinin; S Aalto; J Koikkalainen; J Lötjönen; M Karrasch; N Kemppainen; M Viitanen; K Någren; S Helin; M Scheinin; J O Rinne
Journal:  Neurology       Date:  2009-09-02       Impact factor: 9.910

9.  Hippocampal volume and asymmetry in mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease: Meta-analyses of MRI studies.

Authors:  Feng Shi; Bing Liu; Yuan Zhou; Chunshui Yu; Tianzi Jiang
Journal:  Hippocampus       Date:  2009-11       Impact factor: 3.899

10.  Mapping the evolution of regional atrophy in Alzheimer's disease: unbiased analysis of fluid-registered serial MRI.

Authors:  Rachael I Scahill; Jonathan M Schott; John M Stevens; Martin N Rossor; Nick C Fox
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2002-04-02       Impact factor: 11.205

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  38 in total

Review 1.  Alliance for aging research AD biomarkers work group: structural MRI.

Authors:  Clifford R Jack
Journal:  Neurobiol Aging       Date:  2011-12       Impact factor: 4.673

2.  RNA editing alterations in a multi-ethnic Alzheimer disease cohort converge on immune and endocytic molecular pathways.

Authors:  Olivia K Gardner; Lily Wang; Derek Van Booven; Patrice L Whitehead; Kara L Hamilton-Nelson; Larry D Adams; Takiyah D Starks; Natalia K Hofmann; Jeffery M Vance; Michael L Cuccaro; Eden R Martin; Goldie S Byrd; Jonathan L Haines; William S Bush; Gary W Beecham; Margaret A Pericak-Vance; Anthony J Griswold
Journal:  Hum Mol Genet       Date:  2019-09-15       Impact factor: 6.150

3.  The fornix sign: a potential sign for Alzheimer's disease based on diffusion tensor imaging.

Authors:  Kenichi Oishi; Michelle M Mielke; Marilyn Albert; Constantine G Lyketsos; Susumu Mori
Journal:  J Neuroimaging       Date:  2011-08-17       Impact factor: 2.486

Review 4.  A review on neuroimaging-based classification studies and associated feature extraction methods for Alzheimer's disease and its prodromal stages.

Authors:  Saima Rathore; Mohamad Habes; Muhammad Aksam Iftikhar; Amanda Shacklett; Christos Davatzikos
Journal:  Neuroimage       Date:  2017-04-13       Impact factor: 6.556

5.  Regional covariance patterns of gray matter alterations in Alzheimer's disease and its replicability evaluation.

Authors:  Xiaojuan Guo; Kewei Chen; Yumei Zhang; Yan Wang; Li Yao
Journal:  J Magn Reson Imaging       Date:  2013-04-15       Impact factor: 4.813

6.  Imaging of glutamate neurotransmitter alterations in Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  Mohammad Haris; Kavindra Nath; Kejia Cai; Anup Singh; Rachelle Crescenzi; Feliks Kogan; Gaurav Verma; Sanjana Reddy; Hari Hariharan; Elias R Melhem; Ravinder Reddy
Journal:  NMR Biomed       Date:  2012-10-09       Impact factor: 4.044

7.  An expanded role for neuroimaging in the evaluation of memory impairment.

Authors:  R S Desikan; M S Rafii; J B Brewer; C P Hess
Journal:  AJNR Am J Neuroradiol       Date:  2013-06-13       Impact factor: 3.825

8.  Hippocampal place cell dysfunction and the effects of muscarinic M1 receptor agonism in a rat model of Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  Claire R Galloway; Kaushik Ravipati; Suyashi Singh; Evan P Lebois; Robert M Cohen; Allan I Levey; Joseph R Manns
Journal:  Hippocampus       Date:  2018-07-03       Impact factor: 3.899

9.  Biomarkers in Alzheimer's disease.

Authors:  Mario Riverol; Oscar L López
Journal:  Front Neurol       Date:  2011-07-14       Impact factor: 4.003

10.  Inter-Cohort Validation of SuStaIn Model for Alzheimer's Disease.

Authors:  Damiano Archetti; Alexandra L Young; Neil P Oxtoby; Daniel Ferreira; Gustav Mårtensson; Eric Westman; Daniel C Alexander; Giovanni B Frisoni; Alberto Redolfi
Journal:  Front Big Data       Date:  2021-05-20
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