| Literature DB >> 24600223 |
Lina Riedl1, Ian R Mackenzie2, Hans Förstl1, Alexander Kurz1, Janine Diehl-Schmid1.
Abstract
The term frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) refers to a group of progressive brain diseases, which preferentially involve the frontal and temporal lobes. Depending on the primary site of atrophy, the clinical manifestation is dominated by behavior alterations or impairment of language. The onset of symptoms usually occurs before the age of 60 years, and the mean survival from diagnosis varies between 3 and 10 years. The prevalence is estimated at 15 per 100,000 in the population aged between 45 and 65 years, which is similar to the prevalence of Alzheimer's disease in this age group. There are two major clinical subtypes, behavioral-variant frontotemporal dementia and primary progressive aphasia. The neuropathology underlying the clinical syndromes is also heterogeneous. A common feature is the accumulation of certain neuronal proteins. Of these, the microtubule-associated protein tau (MAPT), the transactive response DNA-binding protein, and the fused in sarcoma protein are most important. Approximately 10% to 30% of FTLD shows an autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance, with mutations in the genes for MAPT, progranulin (GRN), and in the chromosome 9 open reading frame 72 (C9orf72) accounting for more than 80% of familial cases. Although significant advances have been made in recent years regarding diagnostic criteria, clinical assessment instruments, neuropsychological tests, cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers, and brain imaging techniques, the clinical diagnosis remains a challenge. To date, there is no specific pharmacological treatment for FTLD. Some evidence has been provided for serotonin reuptake inhibitors to reduce behavioral disturbances. No large-scale or high-quality studies have been conducted to determine the efficacy of non-pharmacological treatment approaches in FTLD. In view of the limited treatment options, caregiver education and support is currently the most important component of the clinical management.Entities:
Keywords: frontotemporal dementia; frontotemporal lobar degeneration; review
Year: 2014 PMID: 24600223 PMCID: PMC3928059 DOI: 10.2147/NDT.S38706
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat ISSN: 1176-6328 Impact factor: 2.570
International consensus criteria for bvFTD
| The following symptom must be present to meet criteria for bvFTD |
| A. Shows progressive deterioration of behavior and/or cognition by observation or history (as provided by a knowledgable informant) |
| Three of the following behavioral/cognitive symptoms [A–F] must be present to meet criteria. Ascertainment requires that symptoms be persistent or recurrent, rather than single or rare events |
| A. Early |
| A.1. Socially inappropriate behavior |
| A.2. Loss of manners or decorum |
| A.3. Impulsive, rash, or careless actions |
| B. Early apathy or inertia (one of the following symptoms [B.1–B.2] must be present): |
| B.1. Apathy |
| B.2. Inertia |
| C. Early loss of sympathy or empathy (one of the following symptoms [C.1–C.2] must be present): |
| C.1. Diminished response to other people’s needs and feelings |
| C.2. Diminished social interest, interrelatedness, or personal warmth |
| D. Early perseverative, stereotyped, or compulsive/ritualistic behavior (one of the following symptoms [D.1–D.3] must be present): |
| D.1. Simple repetitive movements |
| D.2. Complex, compulsive, or ritualistic behaviors |
| D.3. Stereotypy of speech |
| E. Hyperorality and dietary changes (one of the following symptoms [E.1–E.3] must be present): |
| E.1. Altered food preferences |
| E.2. Binge eating, increased consumption of alcohol or cigarettes |
| E.3. Oral exploration or consumption of inedible objects |
| F. Neuropsychological profile: executive/generation deficits with relative sparing of memory and visuospatial functions (all of the following symptoms [F.1–F.3] must be present): |
| F.1. Deficits in executive tasks |
| F.2. Relative sparing of episodic memory |
| F.3. Relative sparing of visuospatial skills |
| All of the following symptoms [A–C] must be present to meet criteria |
| A. Meets criteria for possible bvFTD |
| B. Exhibits significant functional decline (by caregiver report or as evidenced by CDR or FAQ scores) |
| C. Imaging results consistent with bvFTD (one of the following [C.1–C.2] must be present): |
| C.1. Frontal and/or anterior temporal atrophy on MRI or CT |
| C.2. Frontal hypoperfusion or hypometabolism on PET or SPECT |
| Criterion A and either Criterion B or C must be present to meet criteria |
| A. Meets criteria for possible or probable bvFTD |
| B. Histopathological evidence of FTLD on biopsy or at postmortem |
| C. Presence of a known pathogenic mutation |
| Criteria A and B must be answered negatively for any bvFTD diagnosis. Criterion C can be positive for possible bvFTD but must be negative for probable bvFTD |
| A. Pattern of deficits is better accounted for by other non-degenerative nervous system or medical disorders |
| B. Behavioral disturbance is better accounted for by a psychiatric diagnosis |
| C. Biomarkers strongly indicative of Alzheimer’s disease or other neurodegenerative process |
Notes:
As a general guideline, “early” refers to symptom presentation within the first 3 years. Reproduced from Rascovsky K, Hodges JR, Knopman D, et al. Sensitivity of revised diagnostic criteria for the behavioural variant of frontotemporal dementia. Brain. 2011;134(Pt 9):2456–2477, by permission of Oxford University Press.7
Abbreviations: bvFTD, behavioral-variant frontotemporal dementia; CDR, clinical dementia rating scale; FAQ, functional activities questionnaire scores; CT, computed tomography; FTLD, frontotemporal lobar degeneration; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PET, positron emission tomography; SPECT, single-photon emission computed tomography.
Molecular classification of FTLD with genetic and clinical correlations
| Molecular class | Pathological subtype | Associated genes | Clinical phenotypes
| ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| bvFTD | nfvPPA | svPPA | Park | MND | |||
| FTLD-tau | • | + | (+) | (+) | + | ALS, PLS | |
| • PiD | + | + | (+) | ||||
| • CBD | + | + | + | PLS | |||
| • PSP | + | + | + | PLS | |||
| • AGD | + | ||||||
| • NFT-dementia | + | ||||||
| • MSTD | + | + | PLS | ||||
| FTLD-TDP | • ( | (+) | + | ALS | |||
| • Type A | • | + | + | + | |||
| • Type B | • | + | + | (+) | + | ALS | |
| • Type C | + | + | |||||
| • Type D | • | + | (+) | ALS | |||
| FTLD-FUS | • ( | (+) | ALS | ||||
| • aFTLD-U | + | ||||||
| • NIFID | + | + | PLS | ||||
| • BIBD | + | + | ALS | ||||
| FTLD-UPS | • FTD-3 | • | + | (+) | (ALS) | ||
Notes:
Indicates the characteristic pattern of pathology, not the clinical syndrome. (+) Rare cause or unusual phenotype.
Abbreviations: aFTLD-U, atypical frontotemporal lobar degeneration with ubiquitinated inclusions; AGD, argyrophilic grain disease; ALS, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; BIBD, basophilic inclusion body disease; bvFTD, behavioral-variant FTD; C9orf72, chromosome 9 open reading frame 72; CBD, corticobasal degeneration; CHMP2B, charged multivesicular body protein 2B; FTD, frontotemporal dementia; FTD-3, FTD linked to chromosome 3; FTLD, frontotemporal lobar degeneration; FUS, fused in sarcoma; GRN, progranulin gene; MAPT, microtubule-associated protein tau; MND, motor neuron disease; MSTD, multiple system tauopathy with dementia; NFT-dementia, neurofibrillary tangle predominant dementia; nfvPPA, nonfluent variant primary progressive aphasia; NIFID, neuronal intermediate filament inclusion disease; Park, parkinsonism; PiD, Pick’s disease; PLS, primary lateral sclerosis; PSP, progressive supranuclear palsy; svPPA, semantic variant primary progressive aphasia; TARDBP, transactive response DNA-binding protein; TDP, transactive response DNA-binding protein with molecular weight 43 kDa; UPS, ubiquitin proteasome system; VCP, valosin-containing protein.
FTLD – genes
| Gene symbol | Chromosomal location | Gene name | Mutation frequency |
|---|---|---|---|
| 9p21.2 | Chromosome 9 open reading frame 21 | 14%–48% | |
| 17q21.32 | Progranulin | 3%–26% | |
| 17q21.1 | Microtubule-associated protein tau | 0%–50% | |
| 3p11.2 | Charged multivesicular body protein 2B | <1% | |
| 9p13.3 | Valosin-containing protein | <1% |
Note: Data from Sieben et al.57
Abbreviation: FTLD, frontotemporal lobar degeneration.
Clinical drug trials in FTLD
| Drug | Author | Method | n | Duration | Behavior | Cognition/function |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Rivastigmine (3–9 mg/d) | Moretti et al | Open-label, controlled | 20 | 12 months | Improved (NPI) | Executive function: unchanged; MMSE: deterioration |
| Donepezil (5–10 mg/d) | Mendez et al | Randomized, open-label, controlled | 24 | 6 months | Worsened (FTD inventory) | Global cognitive performance: unchanged; dementia severity: unchanged |
| Donepezil (10 mg/d) or rivasigmine (6–12 mg/d) | Lampl et al | Randomized comparison trial | 9 | 6 months | Not evaluated | Improved (MMSE, clock drawing) |
| Galantamine (16 or 24 mg/d) | Kertesz et al | Open-label followed by randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled | 36 | 18 weeks open-label and 8 weeks randomized | No treatment effects (FBI) | Trend of efficacy in language subscores of PPA subgroup; no treatment effect on Clinical Global Impression of Severity and Improvement |
| Memantine (20 mg/d) | Diehl-Schmid et al | Open-label, uncontrolled | 16 | 6 months | Unchanged (NPI, FBI) | Worsened (ADAScog) |
| Memantine (20 mg/d) | Vercelletto et al | Double-blind, placebo-controlled | 49 | 52 weeks | Treatment group slightly better compared to placebo group (FBI) | No treatment effects (CIBIC, MMSE, DAD, MDRS) |
| Memantine (20 mg/d) | Chow et al | Open-label, uncontrolled | 16 | 7–8 weeks | Unchanged (FAB, FBI, SRI) | Unchanged (CDR) |
| Memantine (20 mg/d) | Boxer et al | Multicenter, randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled | 76 | 26 weeks | No treatment effect (NPI) | No treatment effect (CGIC) |
Abbreviations: FTLD, frontotemporal lobar degeneration; NPI, Neuropsychiatric Inventory; FTD, frontotemporal dementia; FBI, Frontal Behavioral Inventory; FAB, Frontal Assessment Battery; SRI, Stereotypy Rating Inventory; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; PPA, primary progressive aphasia; ADAScog, Alzheimer’s Disease Assessment Scale-cognitive subscale; CIBIC, Clinician Interview Based Impression of Change; DAD, Disability Assessment for Dementia; MDRS, Mattis Dementia Rating Scale; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating; CGIC, Clinical Global Impression of Change; d, day.
Serotonergic antidepressants
| Drug | Author | Method | n | Duration | Behavior | Cognition/function |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Paroxetine (20 mg/d) versus piracetam (1,200 mg/d) | Moretti et al | Randomized, controlled | 16 | 14 months | Improved in paroxetine group | Stable in paroxetine group |
| Paroxetine (40 mg/d) | Deakin et al | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled | 10 | 6 weeks | No treatment effect (NPI, CBI) | Cognition (neuropsychological battery): unchanged/worsened |
| Sertraline (50–100 mg/d) | Mendez et al | Open-label | 8 | 6 months | Decreased stereotypical movements | Not evaluated |
| Trazodone (300 mg/d) | Lebert et al | Randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover | 26 | 12 weeks | Improved (NPI) | No treatment effect (MMSE) |
| Fluvoxamine (50–150 mg/d) | Ikeda et al | Open-label | 15 | 12 weeks | Improved (NPI, SRI) | Unchanged (MMSE) |
| Citalopram (40 mg) | Herrmann et al | Open-label | 15 | 6 weeks | Improved (NPI, FBI) | Not evaluated |
| Moclobemide (300–600 mg/d) | Adler et al | Open-label | 6 | 4 weeks | Minor improvement of some BPSD (symptom list) in a few patients | Unchanged |
Abbreviations: NPI, Neuropsychiatric Inventory; CBI, Cambridge Behavioral Inventory; SRI, Stereotypy Rating Inventory; FBI, Frontal Behavioral Inventory; BPSD, Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms in Dementia; d, day; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination.
Dopaminergic drugs
| Drug | Author | Method | n | Duration | Behavior | Cognition/function |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Dextroamphetamine (20 mg/d) versus quetiapine (150 mg/d) | Huey et al | Randomized, double-blind, crossover design | 8 | Two arms of 3 weeks | Improved with dextroamphetamine (NPI) | No treatment effect (RBANS) |
| Bromocriptine (22.5 mg/d) | Reed et al | Double-blind, placebo-controlled, crossover | 6, only PPA | Two arms of 7 weeks | Not evaluated | Slight slowing of language deterioration |
| Methylphenidate (40 mg/d; single dose) | Rahman et al | Randomized, double-blind, placebo controlled, crossover | 8 | Two test sessions, single dose | Decreased risk taking behavior on gambling task | Unchanged (cognitive test battery) |
Abbreviations: NPI, Neuropsychiatric Inventory; PPA, primary progressive aphasia; RBANS, Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status.