| Literature DB >> 25722748 |
Helena C Chui1, Liliana Ramirez-Gomez1.
Abstract
The co-occurrence of both Alzheimer disease (AD) pathology and vascular brain injury (VBI) is very common, especially amongst the oldest of old. In neuropathologic studies, the prevalence of AD, VBI, and mixed AD/VBI lesions ranks ahead of Lewy bodies and hippocampal sclerosis. In the modern era of structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and amyloid positron emission tomography (PET) imaging, this review examines 1) the prevalence of mixed AD and VBI pathology, 2) the significance of these pathologies for cognitive impairment (AD and vascular cognitive impairment (VCI)), and 3) the diagnosis and treatment of mixed AD/VCI. Although epidemiologic studies report that vascular risk factors for arteriosclerosis increase the risk of incident AD, both autopsy and amyloid PET studies indicate that AD and VBI contribute additively, but independently, to the risk of dementia. The literature confirms the malignancy of AD and highlights the adverse effects of microinfarcts on cognitive function. For the clinical diagnosis of mixed AD/VCI, the presence of AD can be recognized by neuropsychological profile, structural imaging, cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers, and glucose PET and amyloid PET imaging. The diagnosis of VBI, however, still hinges predominantly on the structural MRI findings. Severe amnesia and atrophy of the hippocampus are characteristic of early AD, whereas the cognitive profile for VCI is highly variable and dependent on size and location of VBI. The cognitive profile of mixed AD/VBI is dominated by AD. With the notable exception of microinfarcts (which elude in vivo detection), infarcts, hemorrhages, and white matter hyperintensities on structural MRI currently represent the best markers for the presence VBI. Better markers that reflect the health and reactivity of intracerebral blood vessels are needed. For prevention and treatment, the type of underlying cerebrovascular disease (for example, arteriosclerosis or cerebral amyloid angiopathy) should be considered. It is likely that reduction of vascular risk factors for arteriosclerosis can significantly reduce vascular contributions to mixed dementia.Entities:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25722748 PMCID: PMC4342006 DOI: 10.1186/s13195-015-0104-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alzheimers Res Ther Impact factor: 6.982
Figure 1Mixed Alzheimer disease/vascular brain injury. Additive parallel or interactive pathways? AD, Alzheimer disease; ApoE, apolipoprotein E; CAA, cerebral amyloid angiopathy; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; CVD, cerebrovascular disease; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PET, positron emission tomography; VBI, vascular brain injury; VCI, vascular cognitive impairment; VRF, vascular risk factor; WMH, white matter hyperintensity.
Community-based, autopsy studies are required to estimate the prevalence and incidence of mixed Alzheimer disease/vascular brain injury
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| Nun Study [ | 102 | 87 (76-100) | Khachaturian plaque criteria | Number of infarcts > or <1.5 cm | 39% (24/61) of dementia cases were mixed | Number of tangles and number of lacunes exert independent additive effect on MMSE and likelihood of dementia | MMSE |
| CERAD | |||||||
| ROS [ | 550 | 87 | Mean number of neurofibrillary tangles, neuritic plaques, and diffuse plaques in five lobes | Number of macroscopic and microscopic infarcts | 28% of dementia cases were mixed | AD and VBI pathology have additive effect on odds of dementia | |
| MAP [ | 425 | 87 | Mean number of neurofibrillary tangles, neuritic plaques, and diffuse plaques in five lobes | Number of macroscopic and microscopic infarcts | 44% of dementia cases were mixed | ||
| BLSA [ | 179 | 87.6 ± 7.1 | CERAD | Macroscopic infarcts | Hemispheral infarcts alone or with AD account for 35% of dementia cases | In subjects with intermediate AD pathology scores, a single macroscopic hemispheral infarct was sufficient to cause dementia | Blessed Memory Information Concentration Test |
| Braak and Braak stage | Microscopic infarcts | ||||||
| BLSA [ | 200 | Atherosclerosis (0-3) of coronary, aorta, and intracranial vessels | 45% have remote infarct | 68% of cases have atherosclerosis, which increased the odds of dementia independent of AD pathology or cerebral infarcts | |||
| 175 complete autopsies, including heart and aorta | |||||||
| MRC CFAS [ | N = 456 | 87 (SD = 7): range 66 to 100 (63% ≥85) | CERAD scale (0-3) | Regional infarcts (>1 cm) | Association between AD pathology and cognitive status goes down with age | MMSE | |
| 243 dementia | Diffuse plaques, neuritic plaques, tangles, atrophy | AGECAT | |||||
| 183 without dementia | Small vessel disease: lacunes, microinfarcts, white matter change | ||||||
| Association between atrophy and age continues to go up | |||||||
| 30 unknown | |||||||
| MRC CFAS [ | Self-reported vascular risk factors | Vascular risk factors were not associated with an increased burden of AD pathology at death in old age | |||||
| 26% of non dementia cases had CVA; 43% of dementia cases had CVA | |||||||
| CC75 + C [ | 224 | 91 | CERAD | 22% of 113 dementia cases | |||
| Hisayama [ | N = 469 | CERAD | NINDS-AIREN | 4.7% of dementia cases were mixed | |||
| 275 incident dementia cases | NIA-Reagan | ||||||
| (164 autopsies) | |||||||
| HAAS [ | N = 443 | 86 ± 5.2 | Mean number of neurofibrillary tangles and neuritic plaques over 20 fields in 4 lobes | High correlations noted between MBIs and lacunar infarcts (Spearman r = 0.45, | 14.2% of dementia cases were mixed | No correlation between AD and microvascular lesions | CASI |
| (72-90+) | |||||||
| HAAS [ | N = 436 | Number of infarcts > or <1.0 cm, microinfarcts | MBI found in 72% of demented and 61% of non-demented | ||||
| 144 with dementia | |||||||
| 292 without dementia | MBI and AD exert independent additive effects on cognition |
AD, Alzheimer disease; AGECAT, Automated Geriatric Examination for Computer Assisted Taxonomy; BLSA, Baltimore Longitudinal Aging Study; CASI, Cognitive Abilities Screening Instrument; CC75 + C, Cambridge City Over-75 s Cohort; CERAD, Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer Disease; CFAS, Cognitive Function and Ageing Study; CVA, cerebrovascular accident; HAAS, Honolulu Asia Aging Study; MAP, Rush Memory and Aging Project; MBI, microscopic brain infarct; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Exam; MRC, Medical Research Council; NIA, National Institute on Aging; NINDS-AIREN, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke-Association Internationale pour la Recherche et l’Enseignement en Neurosciences; ROS, Rush Religious Order Study; SD, standard deviation; VBI, vascular brain injury; VCI, vascular cognitive impairment.
Subcortical Ischemic Vascular Dementia (SIVD) Neuropathology study: imaging and clinical correlations
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| Subcortical Ischemic Vascular Dementia (SIVD) study [ | N = 61 | 78 (at time of neuropsych) | CERAD | CVD-PS | Linear composite measures | AD patient scores were lower than EXEC by nearly a standard deviation on average. VBI patients were rather equally impaired on EXEC,MEM and NVMEM | |
| AD = 23 | Braak and Braak ≥ IV | Infarct score ≥20 | |||||
| VBI = 11 | GLOB | ||||||
| Mixed = 9 | MEM | ||||||
| NSP = 19 | EXEC | ||||||
| SIVD study [ | N = 79 | 82.8 ± 7.0 | NINDS-ADRDA criteria | ADDTC criteria | Clin Dx = 28% | Positive likelihood ratios: AD = 6.4 > VCI = 3.7 > mixed = 2.3 | |
| AD = 34 | At time of death | ||||||
| VBI = 15 | CERAD | CVD-PS | Path Dx = 11% | Cognitive status (CN, CIND, Dem) | AD pathology and hippocampal sclerosis have relatively greater effect on cognition than VBI | ||
| Mix = 9 | Braak and Braak ≥ IV | Infarct score ≥20 | |||||
| NSP = 21 | |||||||
| SIVD study [ | N = 93 | 84 | Lacunes associated with WMH | ||||
| Normal = 12 | AD, atherosclerosis, and VBI contribute independently to cortical gray matter atrophy | ||||||
| AD = 46 | AD and hippocampal sclerosis are associated with hippocampal atrophy | ||||||
| VBI = 14 | |||||||
| Mixed = 9 | |||||||
| NSP = 12 | |||||||
| SIVD study [ | N = 163 | 84 | Cerebral atherosclerosis was positively associated with microinfarcts (OR, 2.3; 95% CI, 1.2-4.4) and cystic infarcts (OR, 2.0; 95% CI, 1.0-4.2) but not AD pathology | ||||
| Normal = 23 | |||||||
| AD = 81 | Cerebral amyloid angiopathy was inversely associated with lacunar infarcts (OR, 0.6; 95% CI, 0.41-1.1), but positively associated with Braak and Braak stage (OR, 1.5; 95% CI, 1.1-2.1) and Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer Disease plaque score (OR, 1.5; 95% CI, 1.1-2.2) | ||||||
| VBI = 21 | |||||||
| Mixed = 15 | |||||||
| NSP = 23 | |||||||
| SIVD study (Zheng | N = 116 | 84 | Pathological measures of AD, atherosclerosis, and VBI contribute independently to MRI cortical gray matter atrophy and cognitive impairment. Path analyses show that the adverse effects of atherosclerosis on cognition are largely mediated through subcortical infarcts to brain atrophy, while the effects of AD on cognition work equally through cortical atrophy as well as through a yet unmeasured direct pathway | ||||
| Normal = 12 | |||||||
| AD = 53 | |||||||
| VBI = 18 | |||||||
| Mixed = 9 | |||||||
| NSP = 24 | |||||||
AD, Alzheimer disease; ADDTC, Alzheimer’s Disease Diagnostic and Treatment Centers; CERAD, Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer Disease; CI, confidence interval; CIND, Cognitive impairment not meeting criteria for dementia; Clin Dx, clinical diagnosis; CN, cognitively normal; CVD-PS, cerebrovascular disease-parenchymal score; Dem, dementia; EXEC, executive score; GLOB, global cognition score; MEM, memory score; NINDS-ADRDA, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke-Association Internationale pour la Recherche et l’Enseignement en Neurosciences; NSP, non-significant pathology; NVMEM, non-verbal memory; OR, odds ratio; Path Dx, pathological diagnosis; VBI, vascular brain injury; WMH, white matter hyperintensity.
Studies of mixed Alzheimer disease/vascular brain injury with Alzheimer disease defined by amyloid PET imaging
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| Samsung [ | N = 45 SVD | 74.2 ± 7.6 | Pure SVD | Mixed AD/SVD | Mixed AD/SVD performed worse on delayed recall, had fewer lacunar infarcts and had greater hippocampal atrophy than pure SVD. | |
| N = 31 (69%) PiB- | N = 14 (31%) PiB+ | |||||
| Samsung [ | N = 68 SVD | Pure SVD | Mixed AD/SVD | Differentiation of mixed AD/SVD from pure SVD: | ||
| N = 45 (66.2%) | N = 23 (33.8%) | Hippocampal shape analysis: 95.7% sensitivity; 68.9% specificity | ||||
| PiB- | PiB+ | |||||
| Amygdalar shape analysis: 87.0% sensitivity; 68.9% | ||||||
| Aging Brain Study [ | N = 54 | 79 | PiB+ | VBI: WMHs and infarcts | No relationship between VBI (infarcts or WMHs) and PiB | |
| VBI is associated with impairment in EXEC | ||||||
| N = 33 PiB- | N = 27 VBI- | No relationship between PiB and cognition | ||||
| N = 21 PiB+ | N = 27 VBI+ | |||||
| Aging Brain Study [ | N = 61 | 79 | VBI: Infarcts | Infarction, particularly in cortical and subcortical gray matter, was associated with lower cognitive performance in all domains ( | ||
| N = 32 PiB- | N = 27 infarct- | |||||
| N = 29 PiB+ | N = 34 infarct+ | |||||
| Aging Brain Study [ | N = 43 | 78.9 (6.7) | FCRP accounted for 16% of the variance in PiB index ( | |||
| Aging Brain Study [ | N = 74 | 79 | Higher LDL-C and lower HDL-C levels were both associated with a higher PiB index, independent of apolipoprotein E genotype | |||
| 33 NCI | ||||||
| 38 MCI | ||||||
| 3 CDR1 | ||||||
| Aging Brain Study [ | N = 67 | 79 | A relationship between Aβ and memory was mediated by cortical thickness. | |||
| 35 NCI | The relationship between Aβ and cortical thickness was eliminated after controlling for FCRP, except in PiB+ subjects (n = 22), where Aβ remained associated with thinner cortex in precuneus and occipital lobe | |||||
| 31 MCI | ||||||
| 1 CDR1 | Vascular risk and Aβ both contribute to cortical thickness | |||||
Aβ, amyloid-beta; AD, Alzheimer disease; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating; EXEC, executive score; FCRP, Framingham Coronary Risk Profile; HDL-C, high density lipoprotein cholesterol; LDL-C, low density lipoprotein-cholesterol; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; NCI, no cognitive impairment; PET, positron emission tomography; PiB, Pittsburgh Imaging Compound B; SVD, subcortical vascular dementia; VBI, vascular brain injury; WMH, white matter hyperintensity.
Studies of mixed Alzheimer disease/vascular brain injury with Alzheimer disease defined by cerebrospinal fluid Aβ and phosphorylated tau
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| ADNI [ | N = 819 | NINDS-ADRDA | VRFs | VRFs were not associated with AD biomarkers |
| 229 NCI | WMH | Increased time-varying WMHs were associated with faster decline in executive function and lower FDG uptake in NCI | ||
| 397 CI | ||||
| 193 AD | ||||
| Amsterdam Dementia Cohort [ | N = 914 | NINDS-ADRDA | VCI by NINDS-AIREN criteria | The presence of both MBs and WMHs was associated with lower CSF levels of Aβ42, indicating a direct relationship between SVD and AD pathology (note: could SVD be CAA?) |
| 337 NCI | ||||
| 547 AD | ||||
| 30 VCI | The presence of lacunes was associated with higher Aβ42 in vascular dementia (standardized beta = 0.17, |
Aβ, amyloid-beta; AD, Alzheimer disease; ADNI, Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative; CAA, cerebral amyloid angiopathy; CI, cognitively impaired; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; FDG, [18 F]fluorodeoxyglucose; MB, microbleed; NCI, no cognitive impairment; NINDS-ADRDA, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke-Association Internationale pour la Recherche et l’Enseignement en Neurosciences; NINDS-AIREN, National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke-Association Internationale pour la Recherche et l’Enseignement en Neurosciences; SVD, subcortical vascular dementia; VBI, vascular brain injury; VCI, vascular cognitive impairment; VRF, vascular risk factor; WMH, white matter hyperintensity.