| Literature DB >> 31659172 |
Mattis Jalakas1,2, Sebastian Palmqvist3,4, Sara Hall5,6, Daniel Svärd7,8, Olof Lindberg5, Joana B Pereira7,9, Danielle van Westen7,8, Oskar Hansson10,11.
Abstract
Parkinson's disease (PD) patients frequently develop cognitive impairment. There is a need for brief clinical assessments identifying PD patients at high risk of progressing to dementia. In this study, we look into predicting dementia in PD and underlying structural and functional correlates to cognitive decline in PD. We included 175 patients with PD, 30 with PD dementia, 51 neurologically healthy controls and 121 patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) from Skane University Hospital, BIOFINDER cohorts. All underwent cognitive tests, including MMSE, 10-word list delayed recall (ADAS-cog), A Quick Test of cognitive speed (AQT), Letter S fluency, Clock Drawing Test (CDT) and pentagon copying. In non-demented patients with PD, abnormal AQT and CDT results predicted an increased risk of subsequent development of dementia (hazard ratio 2.2 for both). When comparing the cognitive profile between PD and AD, decreased performance on AQT, which measures attention and processing speed, was more typical in PD. Lastly, we investigated the underlying structural and functional correlates for the PD-specific test AQT with magnetic resonance imaging. In PD patients, decreased performance on AQT was associated with i) cortical thinning in temporoparietal regions, ii) changes in diffusion MRI, especially in the cingulum tract, and iii) decreased functional connectivity in posterior brain networks.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31659172 PMCID: PMC6817840 DOI: 10.1038/s41598-019-51505-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Rep ISSN: 2045-2322 Impact factor: 4.379
Baseline demographics.
| HC (n = 51) | PD (baseline) (n = 175) | PDD (n = 30) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline age, years | 65 (8.5) | 65 (10) | 72.5 (6.6) |
| Gender (1 = female) | 0.56 | 0.37 | 0.3 |
| Years of education | 13.3 (3.2) | 13 (4.0) | 11 (4.5) |
| Disease Duration Years | 5.1 (4.9) | 14 (6.8) | |
| Levodopa equivalents | 455 (455) | 881 (549) | |
| UPDRS-III | 1.7 (2.6) | 16 (10)c | 35 (13)f |
| MMSE (0–30 points) | 28.3 (1.5) | 28.5 (1.3) | 22 (5.0)f i |
| Wordlist delayed recall | 2 (1.7) | 3 (2.1) | 6 (3.0)f i |
|
| |||
| AQT Color Form (sec) | 63 (11) | 71 (29) | 181 (104)f i |
| AQT Color (sec) | 24 (4.5) | 27 (7.0) | 52 (30)f i |
| AQT Form (sec) | 35 (7.5) | 37 (9.3) | 75 (37)f i |
| Letter S fluency | 17.5 (5.9) | 14.7 (5.7)a | 7.9 (4.1)f i |
| Clock Drawing Test (0–5p) | 4.1 (0.7) | 4.2 (0.9) | 4.6 (0.6) |
| Pentagon Drawing (0–13p) | 12 (0.9) | 11.3 (1.3)b | 7.5 (4.0)f i |
Mean presented with standard deviations within parenthesis.
To adjust for multiple comparisons with Bonferroni method, all p-values were multiplied by 3. All comparisons were corrected for age, gender, years of education and disease duration.
aSignificant difference (p < 0.05), comparison between HC and PD.
bSignificant difference (p < 0.01), comparison between HC and PD.
cSignificant difference (p < 0.001), comparison between HC and PD.
dSignificant difference (p < 0.05), comparison between HC and PDD.
eSignificant difference (p < 0.01), comparison between HC and PDD.
fSignificant difference (p < 0.001), comparison between HC and PDD.
gSignificant difference (p < 0.05), comparison between PD and PDD.
hSignificant difference (p < 0.01), comparison between PD and PDD.
iSignificant difference (p < 0.001), comparison between PD and PDD.
Single test risk stratification of PD dementia conversion.
| Cognitive test | HR | p-value | 95% CI |
|---|---|---|---|
| MMSE | 1.2 | 0.39 | 0.80–1.8 |
| AQT Color Form | 1.6 |
| 1.01–2.7 |
| AQT Color | 1.2 | 0.2 | 0.9–1-0.6 |
| AQT Form | 1.6 |
| 1.2–2.0 |
| 10-world list delayed recall | 1.3 | 0.12 | 0.9–1.9 |
| Letter S fluency | 0.7 | 0.13 | 0.48–1.1 |
| Months backwards | 1.1 | 0.5 | 0.79–1.6 |
| Pentagon drawing | 0.56 | 0.55 | 0.314–1.01 |
| Clock Drawing Test | 1.4 |
| 1.03–2.0 |
COX regression evaluating the z-scores of the cognitive tests as predictors for conversion to dementia in non-demented PD patients. Each cognitive test model was adjusted for age, sex, years of education and disease duration. HRs are shown based on test z-scores for comparison between tests.
Comparison of cognitive profile between AD and PDD patients.
| AD (n = 121) | PDD (n = 30) | P-value | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline age, years | 77 (5.5) | 72 (6.0) | <0.001 |
| Years of education | 10 (3.2) | 11 (4.5) | 0.143 |
| MMSE | 22 (4.0) | 22 (5.0) | 0.868 |
| Wordlist delayed recall (0–10 errors) | 8.5 (1.6) | 6.0 (2.9) | <0.001 |
| AQT Color Form (sec) | 108 (35) | 175 (98) | <0.001 |
| AQT Color (sec) | 38 (14) | 52 (20) | <0.001 |
| AQT Form (sec) | 60 (25) | 74 (37) | 0.003 |
| Clock Drawing Test (0–5p) | 3.1 (1.3) | 3.1 (10.9) | 0.61 |
Data are shown as mean values with standard deviations within parenthesis.
Cognitive test comparisons were adjusted for age, years of education and global cognitive function (MMSE).
Correlations between AQT and cortical thickness.
| Regions left side | p-value | Regions right side | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|
| Enthorihnal | <0.05 | Lateroorbitofrontal | <0.05 |
| Inferiotemporal | <0.05 | ||
| Inferiopearietal | <0.05 |
QDEC analysis adjusted for age, years of education and disease duration.
Partial correlations between AQT and white-matter tracts corrected for age, sex, disease duration, brain volume and years of education.
| Tract | Correlation dx (right) | p-value | Correlation sin (left) | p-value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| CD MD |
|
|
|
|
| CV MD |
|
| 0.162 | 0.133 |
| CST MD | −0.065 | 0.525 | −0.043 | 0.676 |
| UF MD | 0.192 | 0.059 | 0.139 | 0.175 |
| SLF MD | 0.093 | 0.366 | 0.17 | 0.096 |
| ILF MD |
|
|
|
|
| IFO MD |
|
| 0.148 | 0.148 |
| FX MD | 0.036 | 0.728 |
CD, Dorsal cingulum; CV, Ventral cingulum; CST, Cortico spinal tract, IFO, Inferior fronto-occipital fasciculus, ILF, inferior longitudinal fasciculus, SLF, Superior longitudinal fasciculus, UF, Uncinate fasciculus, FX fornix, represented in column dx but is not side specific.
Figure 1Functional connection network analysis adjusted for age, sex, years of education and disease duration.