| Literature DB >> 35105351 |
Constance Delaby1,2, Teresa Estellés1,3, Nuole Zhu1,3, Javier Arranz1,3, Isabel Barroeta1,3, María Carmona-Iragui1,3, Ignacio Illán-Gala1,3, Miguel Ángel Santos-Santos1,3, Miren Altuna1,3, Isabel Sala1,3, M Belén Sánchez-Saudinós1,3, Laura Videla1,3,4, Sílvia Valldeneu1,3, Andrea Subirana1,3, Mireia Tondo5,6,7, Francisco Blanco-Vaca5,6,7, Sylvain Lehmann2, Olivia Belbin1,3, Rafael Blesa1,3, Juan Fortea1,3, Alberto Lleó1,3, Daniel Alcolea8,9.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) Aβ1-42 levels and the Aβ1-42/Aβ1-40 ratio are markers of amyloid pathology, but previous studies suggest that their levels might be influenced by additional pathophysiological processes. AIMS: To compare Aβ1-42 and the Aβ1-42/Aβ1-40 ratio in CSF in different neurodegenerative disorders and study their association with other biomarkers (tTau, pTau181, and NfL) and with cognitive and functional progression.Entities:
Keywords: Amyloid; Aβ1–40; Aβ1–42; Biomarkers; Cerebrospinal fluid; Tau
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35105351 PMCID: PMC8809019 DOI: 10.1186/s13195-022-00967-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alzheimers Res Ther Impact factor: 6.982
Demographics, clinical information, and biomarkers across diagnostic categories
| CN | AD | DLB | FTLD | Down | Others | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 197 | 518 | 128 | 186 | 225 | 536 | ||
| Mean (SD) | 53.5 (12.5) | 73.1 (6.88) | 75.7 (5.49) | 70.8 (8.58) | 45.1 (10) | 70 (9.18) | |
| Median [IQR] | 55 [46–62] | 74 [69–78] | 76 [71–80] | 72 [66–77] | 48 [40–52] | 71 [65–77] | |
| 132/65 (67%) | 311/207 (60%) | 64/64 (50%) | 77/109 (41.4%) | 103/122 (45.8%) | 310/226 (57.8%) | ||
| Mean (SD) | 29.2 (0.889) | 23.6 (4.52) | 24 (4.09) | 24 (5.08) | NAa | 25.4 (4.12) | |
| Median [IQR] | 29 [29–30] | 25 [22–27] | 24.5 [22–27] | 25 [21–28] | NAa | 27 [24–28] | |
| Mean (SD) | 15.6 (3.99) | 10.7 (4.72) | 9.18 (5.05) | 12 (5.13) | 15.3 (3.07) | 10.7 (4.93) | |
| Median [IQR] | 16 [12–20] | 10 [8–13] | 8 [7–12] | 12 [8–16] | NAa | 9 [8–13] | |
| 46/151 (23.4%) | 254/251 (50.3%) | 33/93 (26.2%) | 37/139 (21%) | 44/177 (19.9%) | 115/413 (21.8%) | ||
| Mean (SD) | 2.02 (1.99) | 1.09 (1.49) | 3.33 (1.93) | 1.71 (1.47) | 1.76 (2.09) | 0.59 (1.23) | |
| Median [IQR] | 1.71 [0–2.82] | 0 [0–2.06] | 3.46 [2.07–4.52] | 1.52 [0.242–2.66] | NAa | 0 [0–0.383] | |
| Mean (SD) | 1148 (397) | 562 (165) | 817 (399) | 938 (446) | 715 (417) | 1000 (500) | |
| Median [IQR] | 1118 [849–1371] | 556 [432–673] | 703 [542–1009] | 850 [569–1229] | 583 [430–892] | 896 [609–1323] | |
| Mean (SD) | 11,694 (3595) | 12,790 (3781) | 11,506 (4189) | 10,806 (4357) | 11,673 (4678) | 11,399 (4390) | |
| Median [IQR] | 11,329 [9238–13,777] | 12,541 [10,125–15,122] | 10,885 [8882–14,234] | 10,140 [7710–13,334] | 11,035 [8346–14,594] | 10,638 [8112–13,986] | |
| Mean (SD) | 0.0991 (0.0181) | 0.0453 (0.0108) | 0.0727 (0.0263) | 0.0877 (0.0221) | 0.0615 (0.0226) | 0.0862 (0.0225) | |
| Median [IQR] | 0.104 [0.0986–0.109] | 0.0445 [0.0376–0.0514] | 0.0662 [0.0503–0.0996] | 0.0964 [0.0731–0.103] | 0.0562 [0.0422–0.078] | 0.0943 [0.0665–0.103] | |
| Mean (SD) | 255 (152) | 748 (358) | 456 (334) | 387 (260) | 644 (520) | 334 (231) | |
| Median [IQR] | 230 [174–291] | 656 [488–915] | 361 [253–525] | 322 [222–456] | 489 [262–870] | 292 [213–378] | |
| Mean (SD) | 37.3 (27.3) | 122 (60.3) | 70.5 (55.5) | 49.9 (39.2) | 100 (96.8) | 45 (27.4) | |
| Median [IQR] | 31.6 [24.9–42] | 105 [78.7–145] | 51 [35.7–83] | 39.7 [29.2–54.1] | 63.6 [29.8–151] | 41 [29.3–52.7] | |
| Mean (SD) | 475 (256) | 1330 (1824) | 1108 (570) | 2079 (1836) | 815 (773) | 1488 (1340) | |
| Median [IQR] | 458 [320–533] | 981 [791–1254] | 918 [719–1297] | 1412 [884–2767] | 614 [357–1014] | 1089 [595–1878] | |
| 177/0/0 | 0/296/208 | 2/60/64 | 5/90/80 | NAa | 27/348/125 | ||
| 165/13/11/8 | 4/154/2/358 | 50/29/7/42 | 120/8/23/35 | 61/37/13/114 | 345/45/47/100 | ||
MMSE Mini-Mental State Examination, CSF cerebrospinal fluid, CN cognitively normal, AD Alzheimer’s disease, DLB dementia with Lewy bodies; FTLD frontotemporal lobar degeneration-related syndrome, MCI mild cognitive impairment
aDue to specific particularities of the clinical and cognitive assessment in the context of intellectual disability, participants with Down syndrome were excluded from the prognostic analysis
Fig. 1Distribution of participants according to CSF levels of Aβ1–42 and amyloid ratio within diagnostic categories. CN, cognitively normal; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; DLB, dementia with Lewy bodies; FTLD, frontotemporal lobar degeneration-related syndrome. Dashed lines indicate 95% quantile values (Q95%) for Aβ1–42 and Aβ1–42/Aβ1–40 in a middle-aged cognitively normal population as described in the “Material and methods” section
Fig. 2Levels of tTau (A), pTau181 (B), and NfL (C) in CSF according to their amyloid profile
Fig. 3Cognitive progression in patients with mild cognitive impairment according to their amyloid profile. A Kaplan-Meier curve and B age- and sex-adjusted Cox regression display the risk of cognitive progression of all four amyloid profiles (outcome defined as MMSE < 24)
Fig. 4Estimation of the annual change in cognitive and functional scores across amyloid profiles. Estimations of the annual change in MMSE (A), CDR-SOB (B), and FCSRT total score (C) were calculated through linear-mixed models adjusted by baseline MMSE score, baseline age, sex, years of education, pTau181 levels, APOEε4 status, and diagnosis. MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; CDR-SOB, Clinical Dementia Rating Sum of Boxes; FCSRT, free and cued selective reminding test