| Literature DB >> 30646955 |
Lucilla Parnetti1, Elena Chipi2, Nicola Salvadori2, Katia D'Andrea2, Paolo Eusebi2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology begins several years before the clinical onset. The long preclinical phase is composed of three stages according to the 2011National Institute on Aging and Alzheimer's Association (NIA-AA) criteria, followed by mild cognitive impairment (MCI), a featured clinical entity defined as "due to AD", or "prodromal AD", when pathophysiological biomarkers (i.e., cerebrospinal fluid or positron emission tomography with amyloid tracer) are positive. In the clinical setting, there is a clear need to detect the earliest symptoms not yet fulfilling MCI criteria, in order to proceed to biomarker assessment for diagnostic definition, thus offering treatment with disease-modifying drugs to patients as early as possible. According to the available evidence, we thus estimated the prevalence and risk of progression at each preclinical AD stage, with special interest in Stage 3.Entities:
Keywords: Biomarkers; National Institute on Aging–Alzheimer’s Association criteria; Preclinical Alzheimer’s disease; Prevalence; Systematic review
Year: 2019 PMID: 30646955 PMCID: PMC6334406 DOI: 10.1186/s13195-018-0459-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alzheimers Res Ther Impact factor: 6.982
Fig. 1Flowchart for bibliographic search
Characteristics of the cohorts examined
| Reference | Cohort | Group |
| Gender | Mean | Mean | Neuropsychological criteria | Biomarkers |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Arenaza-Urquijo et al., 2017 [ | IMAP+ | CN | 73 | 39/34 | 66.9 | 29.0 | MMSE score ≥ 28 | AV45-PET |
| Barthel et al., 2011 [ | FBB phase 2 study | CN | 68 | 30/38 | 68.2 | NA | CDR = 0; MMSE score ≥ 28 | FBB-PET |
| Besson et al., 2015 [ | IMAP | CN | 54 | 27/27 | 65.8 | 29.0 | Cognitive performance > 5th percentile | AV45-PET |
| Brier et al., 2016 [ | Washington University ACS-KADRC | CN | 157 | 50/107 | 53.1 | 29.2 | CDR = 0 | PiB-PET |
| Byun et al., 2017 [ | KBASE | CN | 205 | 98/107 | 68.5 | NA | CDR = 0 | PiB-PET |
| Cho et al., 2016 [ | Memory Clinic Gangnam Hospital | CN | 67 | 25/42 | 66.1 | 28.1 | No neuropsychological deficits | FBB-PET |
| Clark et al., 2018 [ | WRAP | CN | 314 | 96/218 | 61.5 | NA | No neuropsychological deficits | CSF—NIA-AA criteria |
| Dubois et al., 2018 [ | INSIGHT_preAD | CN | 318 | 117/201 | 76.0 | 28.7 | Cognitive complaints; MMSE score ≥ 27, CDR = 0, FCSRT total recall score ≥ 41 | AV45-PET |
| Eckerström et al., 2017 [ | Gothenburg MCI Study | SCD | 113 | 37/76 | 62.0 | 28.0 | Cognitive complaints (> 6 months) | CSF—NIA-AA criteria |
| Edmonds et al., 2015 [ | ADNI | CN | 570 | 308/262 | 73.0 | NA | No neuropsychological deficits | CSF—NIA-AA criteria |
| Gordon et al., 2015 [ | WU-KADRC | CN | 397 | 141/257 | 67.1 | 29.2 | CDR = 0 | PiB-PET |
| Harrington et al., 2013 [ | Huntington Hospital—Pasadena | CN | 70 | 27/43 | 77.2 | NA | CDR = 0; FAQ = 0; no neuropsychological deficits | CSF Aβ42/t-tau ratio |
| Hatashita and Yamasaki, 2010 [ | Shonan Atsugi Hospital—Japan | CN | 91 | 45/46 | 65.1 | 29.3 | CDR = 0; MMSE score ≥ 28 | PiB-PET |
| Johnson et al., 2013 [ | AV45-A11 study | CN | 78 | 34/44 | 69.4 | 29.6 | MMSE score ≥ 29; no neuropsychological deficits | PiB-PET |
| Kern et al., 2018 [ | H70 Gothenburg Birth Cohort Studies | CN | 259 | 130/129 | 70.6 | 29.3 | CDR = 0 | CSF—NIA-AA criteria |
| Knopman et al., 2012 [ | MCSA | CN | 529 | 289/240 | 78.3 | 28 | No neuropsychological deficits | PiB-PET |
| Lilamand et al., 2016 [ | MAPT | CN | 271 | 108/163 | 76.0 | 28.2 | CDR = 0 | PiB-PET |
| Lim et al., 2014 [ | University of Pittsburgh ADRC and Pepper Registry | CN | 56 | 19/37 | 75.8 | 28.5 | CDR = 0; MMSE score > 27 | PiB-PET |
| Lim et al., 2016 [ | AIBL | CN | 423 | 192/231 | 69.4 | 28.8 | No neuropsychological deficits | PiB-PET |
| Mandecka et al., 2016 [ | Cracow Hospital—Memory Clinic | SCD | 85 | 28/57 | 61.3 | NA | Cognitive complaints | CSF Aβ42 and t-tau |
| Meyer et al., 2018 [ | PreventAD | CN | 101 | 31/70 | 62.9 | NA | MoCA ≥ 23 | CSF—NIA-AA criteria |
| Montal et al., 2018 [ | Spain cohorts | CN | 254 | 141/113 | 58.6 | 28.9 | No cognitive complaints; CDR = 0; no neuropsychological deficits | CSF—NIA-AA criteria |
| Ossenkoppele et al., 2014 [ | BACS | CN | 81 | 29/52 | 75.0 | 29.0 | No cognitive complaints; no neuropsychological deficits | PiB-PET |
| Papp et al., 2017 [ | HABS | CN | 279 | 114/165 | 73.4 | 29.0 | CDR = 0; no deficits on Logical Memory Story A, Delayed Recall, and MMSE | PiB-PET |
| Rodrigue et al., 2012 [ | DLBS | CN | 137 | NA/NA | 64.0 | 29.3 | No neuropsychological deficits | AV45-PET |
| Schoonenboom et al., 2012 [ | VU Medical Center, Alzheimer Center, Amsterdam | SMC | 275 | 151/124 | 59.0 | 29.0 | No neuropsychological deficits | CSF Aβ42,t-tau, p-tau |
| Snyder et al., 2016 [ | Rhode Island and Alzheimer Assessment Trial Match | CN | 63 | 24/39 | 62.8 | 29.1 | MMSE score ≥ 27; no neuropsychological deficits | AV45-PET |
| Soldan et al., 2016 [ | BIOCARD | CN | 222 | 89/133 | 56.9 | 29.5 | No neuropsychological deficits | CSF Aβ42, t-tau, p-tau |
| Taylor et al., 2017 [ | APEX | CN | 128 | 34/94 | 71.3 | 29.0 | CDR = 0; no neuropsychological deficits | PiB-PET |
| Um et al., 2017 [ | Catholic Geriatric Neuroimaging Database | CN | 50 | 18/32 | 68.0 | 28.5 | CDR = 0; MMSE score > 27 | FBB-PET |
| Van Harten et al., 2013 [ | Amsterdam Dementia Cohort | SMC | 132 | 76/56 | 61.4 | 28.3 | Cognitive complaints; no neuropsychological deficits | CSF—NIA-AA criteria |
| Visser et al., 2009 [ | DESCRIPA | CN | 89 | 41/48 | 67.1 | 29.3 | No neuropsychological deficits | CSF Aβ42/tau |
| SCI | 60 | 31/29 | 66.0 | 28.8 | Cognitive complaints; no neuropsychological deficits | CSF Aβ42/tau | ||
| Wolfsgruber et al., 2015 [ | DCN | SCD | 82 | 58/24 | 66.7 | 27.7 | No neuropsychological deficits | CSF Aβ42/t-tau |
| Zhao et al., 2018 [ | GEM | CN | 175 | 104/71 | 86.0 | NA | No neuropsychological deficits | PiB-PET |
Aβ amyloid beta, ACS-KADRC Adult Children Study Knight Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center, AD Alzheimer’s disease, ADNI Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, ADRC Knight Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center; AIBL Australian Imaging Biomarkers & Lifestyle study, APEX University of Kansas’s Alzheimer’s Prevention through Exercise, AV45 florbetapir, BACS Berkeley Aging Cohort Study, BIOCARD Biomarkers of Cognitive Decline Among Normal Individuals, CDR Clinical Dementia Rating Scale, CN cognitively normal, CSF cerebrospinal fluid, DESCRIPA Development of screening guidelines and criteria for pre-dementia Alzheimer’s disease, DCN German Dementia Competence Network, DLBS Dallas Lifespan Brain Study, F female, FAQ Functional Assessment Questionnaire, FBB florbetaben, FCSRT Free And Cued Selective Reminding Test, GEM Ginkgo Evaluation of Memory, HABS Harvard Aging Brain Study, IMAP Imagerie Multimodale de la Maladie d’Alzheimer à un stade Precoce, INSIGHT_preAD Investigation of Alzheimer’s Predictors in Subjective Memory Complainers, KBASE Korean Brain Aging Study for Early Diagnosis and Prediction of Alzheimer’s Disease, M male, MAPT Multidomain Alzheimer Preventive Trial, MCI mild cognitive impairment, MCSA Mayo Clinic Study of Aging, MMSE Mini Mental State Examination, MoCA Montreal Cognitive Assessment, NIA-AA National Institute on Aging and Alzheimer’s Association, NA not assessed, PET positron emission tomography, PiB Pittsburgh compound, p-tau phosphorylated tau, t-tau total tau, SCD subjective cognitive decline, SCI subjective cognitive impairment, SMC subjective memory complaints, WRAP Wisconsin Registry for Alzheimer’s Prevention, WU-KADRC Knight Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center at Washington University
Fig. 2Prevalence of pathophysiological biomarker positivity across the 2011 NIA-AA preclinical AD stages. CI confidence interval, CSF cerebrospinal fluid, PET positron emission tomography
Fig. 3Prevalence of preclinical AD stages according to 2011 NIA-AA criteria. CI confidence interval
Rates of clinical progression across NIA-AA preclinical AD stages
| Reference | Cohort | Group |
| Clinical progression | Mean follow-up (years) | Stage 0, % ( | Stage 1, % | Stage 2, % | Stage 3, % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Eckerström et al., 2017 [ | Gothenburg MCI Study | CN | 113 | Cognitive decline–dementiaa | 4 | 28% (13/46) | 50% (5/10) | 81% (17/21) | 100% (6/6) |
| Edmonds et al., 2015 [ | ADNI | CN | 570 | MCI–dementiab | 2.7 | 18% (25/142) | 21% (10/48) | 37% (64/173) | 90% (45/50) |
| Knopman et al., 2012 [ | MCSA | CN | 296 | MCI–dementiab | 1.3 | 5% (6/127) | 11% (5/44) | 21% (8/39) | 43% (3/7) |
| Soldan et al., 2016 [ | BIOCARD | CN | 222 | MCI–dementiab | 10.4 | 18% (18/102) | 19.520% (9/46) | 54% (15/28) | Not specifically addressed |
| Van Harten et al., 2013 [ | Amsterdam Dementia Cohort | SMC | 132 | MCI–dementiab | 1.5 | 3% (2/80) | 18% (2/11) | 60% (6/10) | Not specifically addressed |
| Vos et al., 2013 [ | WU-ADRC | CN | 311 | MCIc | 3.4 | 2% (2/129) | 13% (6/47) | 25% (9/36) | 54% (7/13) |
AD Alzheimer’s disease, ADNI Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, BIOCARD Biomarkers of Cognitive Decline Among Normal Individuals, CN cognitively normal, MCI mild cognitive impairment, MCSA Mayo Clinic Study of Aging, NIA-AA National Institute on Aging and Alzheimer’s Association, SMC subjective memory complaints, n progr/n tot number progressed/total number, WU-ADRC Washington University Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center
aCognitive decline outcome defined as decline in neuropsychological test results or to clinical dementia (using Global Deterioration Scale and criteria for dementia), at follow-up
bProgression to diagnosis of MCI and dementia due to AD (NIA-AA criteria)
cProgression to Clinical Dementia Rating Scale of at least 0.5 (MCI), symptomatic AD (score of at least 0.5 for memory and at least one other domain and cognitive impairments deemed to be due to AD)
Fig. 4Relative risk of progression among 2011 NIA-AA preclinical AD stages. CI confidence interval, RR relative risk