| Literature DB >> 33789730 |
Kok Pin Ng1,2,3, Hui Chiew1,2,3, Pedro Rosa-Neto4, Nagaendran Kandiah1,2,3, Zahinoor Ismail5, Serge Gauthier6.
Abstract
The development of in vivo biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease (AD) has advanced the diagnosis of AD from a clinical syndrome to a biological construct. The preclinical stage of AD continuum is defined by the identification of AD biomarkers crossing the pathological threshold in cognitively unimpaired individuals. While neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS) are non-cognitive symptoms that are increasingly recognized as early manifestations of AD, the associations of NPS with AD pathophysiology in preclinical AD remain unclear. Here, we review the associations between NPS and AD biomarkers amyloid-β (Aβ), tau and neurodegeneration in preclinical AD and cognitively-unimpaired individuals in 19 eligible English-language publications (8 cross-sectional studies, 10 longitudinal, 1 both cross-sectional and longitudinal). The cross-sectional studies have consistently shown that NPS, particularly depressive and anxiety symptoms, are associated with higher Aβ. The longitudinal studies have suggested that greater NPS are associated with higher Aβ and cognitive decline in cognitively unimpaired subjects over time. However, most of the studies have either cross-sectionally or longitudinally shown no association between NPS and tau pathology. For the association of NPS and neurodegeneration, two studies have shown that the cerebrospinal fluid total-tau is linked to longitudinal increase in NPS and that the NPS may predict longitudinal metabolic decline in preclinical AD, respectively. However, evidence for the association between atrophy and NPS in preclinical AD is less consistent. Therefore, future longitudinal studies with well-designed methodologies and NPS measurements are required not only to determine the relationship among AT(N) biomarkers, NPS and cognitive decline, but also to elucidate the contribution of comorbid pathology to preclinical AD.Entities:
Keywords: Amyloid-β; Hyperphosphorylated tau; Mild behavioral impairment; Neurodegeneration; Neuropsychiatric symptoms; Preclinical Alzheimer’s disease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2021 PMID: 33789730 PMCID: PMC8011383 DOI: 10.1186/s40035-021-00236-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Neurodegener ISSN: 2047-9158 Impact factor: 8.014
Characteristics of the reviewed cross-sectional studies
| No. | Author | Study population (cohort) | AT(N) Biomarkers | Biomarker method / assay | NPS instrument | NPS with association | Significant findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Binette et al. 2020 [ | 117 ADAD mutation carriers (DIAN) | A | PiB-PET, global SUVR | IPIP-NEO-120, NPI-Q | NPI-Q score | • ↑ A associated with ↑ NPI-Q score |
| 2 | Gatchel et al. 2017 [ | 111 CU - 5 with depression (HABS) | A T | PiB PET, DVR cut-off > 1.20 [18F]T807-PET | GDS | GDS score | • ↑ T associated with ↑ GDS score |
| 3 | Kim et al. 2018 [ | 667 CU (NACC) | A T | Pathology: neuritic plaques (T) and neurofibrillary tangles (A) | NPI-Q | Psychosis | • ↑ T associated with ↑ psychosis • No association between A and NPI-Q score |
| 4 | Krell-Roesch et al. 2017 [ | 1038 CU (MCSA) | A | PiB-PET, SUVR cut-off ≥1.40 | BAI, BDI-II | Anxiety symptoms, depressive symptoms | • ↑ A associated with ↑ anxiety and ↑ depressive symptoms |
| 5 | Lussier et al. 2020 [ | 96 CU (TRIAD – McGill University) | A T N (GM volume) | [18F]AZD4694-PET, SUVR cut-off by visual inspection [18F]MK6240-PET 3 T MRI | MBI-C | MBI-C score | • A linearly correlated with total MBI-C score • No association between T, N and MBI-C score |
| 6 | Sun et al. 2008 [ | 995 CU and MCI - 348 depressed (NAME cohort) | A | Sandwich Aβ ELISA | CES-D | Depression | • ↑ A associated with depression |
| 7 | Yasuno et al. 2016 [ | 30 CU | A | PiB-PET, BPND categorized by tertiles | GDS-S | GDS-S score | • ↑ A associated with ↑ GDS-S score |
| 8 | Krell-Roesch et al. 2016 [ | 668 CU (MCSA) | N (Glucose metabolism) | FDG-PET, SUVR cut-off < 1.32 in AD-signature ROI | NPI-Q, BAI, BDI-II | Depression, anxiety | • ↓ Glucose metabolism associated with depression, especially in APOE ε4 carriers • ↓ Glucose metabolism associated with ↑ depression and ↑ anxiety symptoms |
| 9 | Donovan et al. 2015 [ | 248 CU (HABS) | N (HV, glucose metabolism) A | 3 T MRI, FDG-PET PiB-PET, DVR cut-off > 1.20 | GDS | Depression | • ↓ HV and ↓ glucose metabolism associated with ↑ GDS score • ↓ HV associated with ↑ dysphoria and ↑ apathy-anhedonia scores • ↓ Glucose metabolism associated with ↑ apathy-anhedonia scores • No association between A and GDS score |
↑: higher/greater; ↓ lower/lesser; A: amyloid-β; Aβ: amyloid-β; Aβ40: amyloid-β 1–40; Aβ42: amyloid-β 1–42; ADAD autosomal dominant Alzheimer’s disease, BAI Beck Anxiety Inventory, BDI-II Beck Depression Inventory-II, BP binding potential (BP) estimates relative to nondisplaceable (ND) binding, CES-D Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale, CU cognitively unimpaired, DIAN Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer Network, DVR distribution volume ratio, ELISA enzyme linked immunosorbent assay, FDG fluorodeoxyglucose, GDS geriatric depression scale, GDS-S geriatric depression scale short form, GM grey matter, HABS Harvard Aging Brain Study, HV hippocampal volume, IPIP-NEO-120 International Personality Item Pool Representation of the NEO PI, MBI-C Mild Behavioural Impairment Checklist, MCSA Mayo Clinic Study of Aging, MRI magnetic resonance imaging, N neurodegeneration, NACC National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center, NAME Nutrition, Aging and Memory in the Elderly study, NPI-Q Neuropsychiatric Inventory Questionnaire, OR odds ratio, PET positron emission tomography, PiB Pittsburgh Compound B, ROI region of interest, T tau, SUVR standardized uptake value ratio, TRIAD Translational Biomarkers of Aging and Dementia cohort
Characteristics of the reviewed longitudinal studies
| No. | Author | Study population (cohort) | Follow-up duration | AT(N) Biomarkers | Biomarker method / assay | NPS instrument | NPS with association | Significant findings |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Binette et al. 2020 [ | 115 CU at-risk for AD (PREVENT-AD) | 3 years | A T | [18F]NAV4694-PET, global SUVR [18F]AV1451-PET, SUVR in Braak stages I, III, IV | GDS-S, AES, Geriatric anxiety scale, Stress subscale, Big5 inventory | Apathy, anxiety | • ↓ A associated with ↓ anxiety and apathy at baseline • ↓ T associated with ↓ apathy at baseline • No longitudinal association between A, T and NPS |
| 2 | Babulal et al. 2016 [ | 118 CU at baseline (9 with mood disorder) 66 CU on follow-up (Washington University) | 1 year | A T N (CSF total tau) | PiB-PET, MCBP cut-off used median split CSF Aβ42, total tau, ptau181 ELISA. Cut-off values used median split | POMS-SF, GDS-S, NPI-Q | Total mood disturbance, NPI-Q score, anxiety and depressive symptoms | • ↑ A longitudinally associated with ↑ total mood disturbance, anxiety, depression scores on POMS-SF, ↑ NPI-Q score and ↑ GDS-S score • T and N predicted longitudinal changes in NPI-Q score |
| 3 | Blasko et al. 2010 [ | 331 CU (VITA cohort) | 2.5 years | A | Sandwich Aβ ELISA | DSM-IV criteria, GDS | Depression | • ↑ A at baseline predicted late-onset depression |
| 4 | Direk et al. 2013 [ | 657 nondemented (Rotterdam study) | 11 years | A | Sandwich Aβ ELISA | CES-D, HADS | Depressive symptoms | • ↑ A associated with ↑ depressive symptoms at baseline and subsequent incident dementia |
| 5 | Donovan et al. 2018 [ | 270 CU (HABS) | 5 years | A | PiB-PET, DVR as continuous variable | GDS | Anxious-depressive symptoms | • ↑ A longitudinally associated with ↑ GDS and anxiety-concentration scores |
| 6 | Gatchel et al. 2019 [ | 276 CU - 22 with mild depression (HABS) | 1 year | A N (HV, glucose metabolism) | PiB-PET, DVR cut-off > 1.20 3 T MRI, FDG-PET | GDS | GDS score | • ↑ A moderated the longitudinal association between ↑ depressive symptoms and ↑ cognitive decline |
| 7 | Harrington et al. 2017 [ | 359 CU (AIBL) | 54 months | A | PiB-PET, SUVR cut-off ≥1.5 | GDS-S | Incident depression | • ↑ A longitudinally associated with ↑ incident depression |
| 8 | Johansson et al. 2020 [ | 104 CU 53 MCI (BioFINDER) | 4 years | A N (GM thickness, subcortical volumes) | [18F] flutemetamol PET, SUVR cut-off > 1.42 3 T MRI | AES, HADS | Apathy, anxiety | • ↑ A longitudinally associated with ↑ apathy, ↑ anxiety over time • ↑ N longitudinally associated with ↑ apathy over time (in CU and MCI subjects) |
| 9 | Perin et al. 2018 [ | 585 CU (AIBL) | 72 months | A | PiB-PET, SUVR cut-off ≥1.5 | GDS-S | GDS-S score, apathy-anxiety symptoms | • ↑ A longitudinally associated with ↑ GDS-S score and apathy-anxiety symptoms |
| 10 | Qiu et al. 2015 [ | 223 CU - 68 depressed (NAME cohort) | 6.2 years | A | Sandwich Aβ ELISA, Aβ + cut-off used median split of plasma Aβ40/Aβ42 ratio | CES-D | Nil | • No association between A and depression |
| 11 | Ng et al. 2017 [ | 33 preclinical AD – A + T+ 60 at-risk for AD - A + T- or A-T+ 22 healthy control (ADNI) | 2 years | N (Glucose metabolism) | FDG-PET | NPI | NPI-Q score | • ↑ NPI-Q score predicted longitudinal ↓ glucose metabolism in preclinical AD |
↑: higher/greater; ↓ lower/lesser, A amyloid-β; AD Alzheimer’s disease, ADNI Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, AES Apathy Evaluation Scale, AI anterior insula, AIBL Australian Imaging, Biomarker & Lifestyle Study of Ageing, Aβ amyloid-β, Aβ amyloid-β 1–40; Aβ amyloid-β 1–42, CES-D Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale, CSF cerebrospinal fluid, CU cognitively unimpaired, DSM-IV Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-IV, DVR distribution volume ratio, ELISA enzyme linked immunosorbent assay, FDG fluorodeoxyglucose, GDS geriatric depression scale, GDS-S geriatric depression scale short form, GM grey matter, HABS Harvard Aging Brain Study, HADS Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, HV hippocampal volume, MCBP mean cortical binding potential, MCI mild cognitive impairment, N neurodegeneration, NAME, Nutrition, Aging and Memory in the Elderly study, NPI Neuropsychiatric Inventory, NPI-Q Neuropsychiatric Inventory Questionnaire, OR odds ratio, PCC posterior cingulate cortex, PET positron emission tomography PiB Pittsburgh Compound B, POMS-SF Profile of Mood States - Short Form, ptau181 phosphorylated tau181, SUVR standardized uptake value ratio, T tau, VITA Vienna Transdanube Aging study, vmPFC ventromedial prefrontal cortex