| Literature DB >> 29614653 |
Ellis Niemantsverdriet1, Bart F E Feyen1,2, Nathalie Le Bastard1,3, Jean-Jacques Martin1, Johan Goeman4, Peter Paul De Deyn1,4, Maria Bjerke1, Sebastiaan Engelborghs1,4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Differential dementia diagnosis remains a challenge due to overlap of clinical profiles, which often results in diagnostic doubt.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Ambiguous diagnosis; biomarkers; cerebrospinal fluid; dementia; differential dementia diagnosis; neuropathology
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29614653 PMCID: PMC5900550 DOI: 10.3233/JAD-170927
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alzheimers Dis ISSN: 1387-2877 Impact factor: 4.472
Table2
| a. Clinical diagnosis versus CSF biomarker-based diagnosis according to the IWG-2 criteria, using the autopsy-confirmed diagnosis as a reference ( | |||
| Biomarker diagnosis Correct | Biomarker diagnosis Incorrect | Total | |
| Clinical diagnosis Correct | 30 | 7 | 37 |
| Clinical diagnosis Incorrect | 6 | 4 | 10 |
| Total | 36 | 11 | 47 |
| b. Clinical diagnosis versus CSF biomarker-based diagnosis according to the NIA-AA criteria, using the autopsy-confirmed diagnosis as a reference ( | |||
| Biomarker diagnosis Correct | Biomarker diagnosis Incorrect | Total | |
| Clinical diagnosis Correct | 24 | 4 | 28 |
| Clinical diagnosis Incorrect | 6 | 2 | 8 |
| Total | 30 | 6 | 36 |
In total, 24 subjects had an ambiguous clinical diagnosis and were excluded from this analysis. The other 47 individuals were subdivided into concordance/discordance between the clinical diagnoses and CSF biomarker diagnosis, both for the IWG-2 criteria (a) and NIA-AA criteria (b), compared to neuropathological diagnosis. Eleven subjects with an intermediate clinical diagnosis based on the NIA-AA criteria were not included in Table 2b as we could not decide if they were correctly or incorrectly CSF biomarker-based diagnosed compared to the neuropathological diagnosis. Table 2a (n = 47), the sensitivity, specificity, diagnostic accuracy, and positive/negative predicted values were calculated for both the clinical and CSF biomarker diagnosis compared to the neuropathological diagnosis (respectively, clinically 78%, 80%, 79%, and 89% /63%; and for CSF biomarker-based diagnosis 84%, 40%, 70%, and 75% /55%). Table 2b (n = 36), the sensitivity, specificity, diagnostic accuracy, and positive/negative predicted values were calculated for both the clinical and CSF biomarker diagnosis compared to the neuropathological diagnosis (respectively, clinically 82%, 67%, 78%, and 88% /55%; and for CSF biomarker-based diagnosis 100%, 67%, 92%, and 90% /100%). CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; IWG-2, International Working Group; NIA-AA, National Institute on Aging/Alzheimer’s Association.
Patients with ambiguous clinical diagnoses as compared to CSF biomarker-based diagnoses using the IWG-2 criteria
| Clinical diagnosis (n) | Suggestive for AD | Correct biomarker diagnosis (%) | Not suggestive for AD | Correct biomarker diagnosis (%) |
| Probable AD/Probable non-AD (5) | 4 | 75 | 1 | 100 |
| Probable AD/Possible non-AD (15) | 13 | 62 | 2 | 50 |
| Probable non-AD/Possible AD (3) | 2 | 50 | 1 | 100 |
| Possible AD/Possible non-AD (1) | 1 | 100 | 0 | 0 |
Data are number of patients (n) and correct relative number of diagnoses (%). The category ’suggestive for AD’ consists of patients with an AD CSF biomarker profile according to the IWG-2 criteria, whereas ‘not suggestive for AD’ were patients with CSF biomarkers not suggestive for AD according to the IWG-2 criteria. A correct diagnosis was based if the diagnostic categories of pathology and of CSF biomarkers according to the IWG-2 for individual patients matched, for instance if definite AD and cases with AD co-pathology had a positive biomarker profile. The sensitivity, specificity, diagnostic accuracy, and positive/negative predicted values were calculated for the CSF biomarker diagnoses based on the IWG-2 criteria compared to the neuropathological diagnosis (respectively, 90%, 50%, 67%, and 56% /88%). AD, Alzheimer’s disease; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; IWG-2, International Working Group; NIA-AA, National Institute on Aging/Alzheimer’s Association; non-AD, other type of dementia (than Alzheimer’s disease).
Description of the population
| Pathological diagnosis | ||||
| AD ( | non-AD ( | Primary non-AD with AD co-pathology ( | ||
| Gender (% male/female) | 52/48 | 59/41 | 43/57 | 0.735 |
| Age at inclusion (y) | 80.1 [±9.0] | 69.5 [±12.1] | 75.9 [±8.5] | 0.001∧ |
| Age at death (y) | 82.0 [±8.3] | 70.8 [±11.8] | 76.9 [±8.7] | 0.001∧ |
| MMSE (score out of 30) (n) | 13.5 [±6.3] (36) | 16.0 [±7.2] (16) | 16.0 [±6.8] (7) | NS |
| Interval inclusion - autopsy (y) | 1.7 [±2.6] | 1.4 [±1.7] | 0.9 [±1.3] | NS |
| Interval last clinical evaluation - autopsy (y) | 0.8 [±1.7] | 0.6 [±1.0] | 0.4 [±0.9] | NS |
| CSF Aβ1 - 42 (pg/mL) | 394.5 [280.3–506.3] | 463.3 [378.0–573.8] | 450.1 [438.0–537.0] | NS |
| CSF T-tau (pg/mL) | 723.7 [358.0–1200.08] | 544.7 [211.8–976.0] | 645.4 [375.0–1200.0] | NS |
| CSF P-tau181 (pg/mL) | 103.3 [58.3–137.3] | 73.4 [25.4–69.6] | 67.2 [46.3–82.5] (7) | 0.001∧, $ |
Data are presented as mean [±SD] values, percentage (%), or number (n). CSF biomarker data are presented as median values [IQR]. ∧Significantly different between AD and non-AD patient group. $Significantly different between AD and non-AD with AD co-pathology. AD, Alzheimer’s disease; Aβ1 - 42, amyloid-β of 42 amino acids; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; IQR, interquartile range; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; non-AD, other type of dementia (than Alzheimer’s disease); NS, not significant; P-tau181, phosphorylated tau at Threonine 181; SD, standard deviation; T-tau, total tau protein.