| Literature DB >> 35203985 |
Fadi Hassan1,2, Mohammad E Naffaa1,2, Amir Saab2,3, Chaim Putterman2,4,5.
Abstract
Cognitive impairment is frequently reported among anti-phospholipid syndrome (APS) patients as well as anti-phospholipid antibody (aPL) carriers, but it is less studied than other manifestations of this condition. Moreover, the exact prevalence of cognitive impairment in these patients has not been accurately determined, mainly due to inconsistency in the tools used to identify impairment, small sample sizes, and variability in the anti-phospholipid antibodies measured and positivity cutoffs. The notion of a direct pathogenic effect is supported by the observation that the higher the number of aPLs present and the higher the load of the specific antibody, the greater the risk of cognitive impairment. There is some evidence to suggest that besides the thrombotic process, inflammation-related pathways play a role in the pathogenesis of cognitive impairment in APS. The cornerstone treatments of APS are anti-coagulant and anti-thrombotic medications. These treatments have shown some favorable effects in reversing cognitive impairment, but solid evidence for the efficacy and safety of these treatments in the context of cognitive impairment is still lacking. In this article, we review the current knowledge regarding the epidemiology, pathophysiology, clinical associations, and treatment of cognitive impairment associated with APS and aPL positivity.Entities:
Keywords: anti-phospholipid carrier; anti-phospholipid syndrome; cognitive impairment; dementia
Year: 2022 PMID: 35203985 PMCID: PMC8870021 DOI: 10.3390/brainsci12020222
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Brain Sci ISSN: 2076-3425
Factors limiting the comparability across studies of cognitive impairment in aPL carriers.
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aPL can be found in the general population, but most cases are not associated with cognitive decline. |
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aPL quantification is performed using various methods. |
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Cut-off levels for positivity for aPL have changed over time. |
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APS can be secondary to autoimmune disease, which may itself affect cognition. |
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The prevalence of aPL antibodies increases in the elderly population, in which cognitive impairment and dementia are also common. |
aPL—anti-phospholipid antibodies; APS—anti-phospholipid syndrome (APS).
Figure 1Pathophysiology of cognitive impairment in aPL carriers and APS patients. aPL—anti-phospholipid antibodies; MRI—magnetic resonance imaging.
Cognitive impairment in aPL carriers and APS patients.
| Study | Study Population | Control Group | Cognitive Tests | Main Results | Cognitive Impairment Frequency |
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| Schmidt et al., 1995 [ | Elderly subjects ( | Age-matched non- aPL carriers | MWT-B, Janke and Debus, LGT-3, WCST, Alters Konzentrations of Gatterer, Purdue Pegboard | Impaired memory and visuopractical abilities. | Not reported |
| Jacobson et al., 1999 [ | Asymptomatic, aPL-carriers, non-elderly adults ( | Age- and education-matched non-aPL carriers | Wechsler, CVLT, Benton line orientation, COWAT, finger oscillation, grooved pegboard, RCFT, trail making, WCST, Beck, state-trait anxiety inventory | Impaired executive functioning, verbal learning, memory, and visuospatial abilities. | 33% in aPL carries vs. 4% in controls |
| Erkan et al., 2010 [ | High titers of aPL antibodies ( | Moderate titers of aPL antibodies ( | Not specified | Increased prevalence of cognitive impairment in the higher-titer group in a linear pattern | 12% in high titers vs. |
| Kozora et al., 2014 [ | Non SLE aPL-carriers ( | SLE patients with negative aPL | FSIQ, Wechsler digit symbol and block design, trail making, Stroop color and word, CVLT, Rey-O Immediate, Rey-O Recall, LNST, COWAT, PASAT, Dig Vig, category test, finger tapping test | High frequency of cognitive impairment in both groups with no significant difference between the groups | 40% in non-SLE aPL carriers vs. 60% in the SLE non aPL carriers |
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| Tektonidou et al., 2006 [ | Primary APS ( | Healthy age-, sex-, and education-matched controls | Wechsler digit span, symbol and block design, Rey AVLT, RCFT, SCWT, TMT, COWAT. | Impairment of visual learning, memory, visuomotor and visuospatial speed and flexibility, verbal fluency, and rapid auditory information processing impaired. | 42% in APS patients vs. 18% in the controls |
| Coin et al., 2015 [ | Primary APS ( | Healthy, age- and education-matched controls | TAVEC, RCFT, Stroop color and word test, verbal phonemic fluency and semantic fluency (Spanish version), Ruff 2&7 selective attention test. | Impaired executive functions and memory (verbal and visual) | 80% in primary APS, 75% in secondary APS with SLE, 48% in SLE without aPLs, and 16% in the controls |
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| Maeshima et al., 1992 [ | Secondary APS with SLE ( | Healthy controls | MMSE, “Kana” pick-up test, Miyake’s paired associated memory scale, word recall, digit span, Watamori method, line bisection test, line cancellation task, recognition of intricate pictures and perspective cube copying test. | Higher cortical impairment in study group | 76% vs. missing data |
| Afeltra et al., 2003 [ | Secondary APS with SLE ( | Healthy controls | Not specified | High titers of aPL were associated with cognitive impairment | 58% |
| Mikdashi et al., 2004 [ | Secondary APS with SLE ( | MMSE with other tests not explicitly specified | No details on cognitive impairment patterns | 27% in study group | |
| McLaurin et al., 2005 [ | Secondary APS with SLE ( | Mild impairment battery from the Automated Neuropsychological Assessment Metrics (ANAM). | No details on cognitive impairment patterns | 37.5% in study group | |
| Tomietto et al., 2007 [ | Secondary APS with SLE ( | Rheumatoid arthritis | Raven’s progressive matrices, comprehension, similarities, block design, and digit symbol of Wechsler, Wechsler memory scale, Rey auditory-verbal learning, trail-making, Corsi block, number cancellation, reverse numerical sequence (MMSE), Stroop word and color test, semantic and phonemic verbal fluency, denomination of Aachener Aphasie and token test. | Executive functions and complex attention were more frequently impaired in APS patients. | 68.6% in study group vs. 41.2% in controls |
| Murray et al., 2012 [ | Secondary APS with SLE ( | HVLT-R, COWAT | Verbal memory and verbal fluency | 15% in entire cohort | |
| Conti et al., 2012 [ | Secondary APS with SLE ( | Standardized testing from ACR and the CSI standardized in an Italian population | Visuospatial domain mainly impaired | Missing data | |
aPL—anti-phospholipid antibodies; APS—anti-phospholipid syndrome; MWT-B—mehrfachwahlwortschatztest; LGT-3—Bäumler’s Lern-und Gedächtnistest; WCST—Wisconsin card sorting test; MRI—magnetic resonance imaging; SLE—systemic lupus erythematosus; CVLT—California verbal learning test; COWAT—controlled oral word association test; RCFT—Rey complex figure test; FSIQ—full-scale intelligence quotient; Rey–O immediate, Rey–O recall—immediate and 30-min delayed recall of the Rey–Osterrieth complex figure test; LNST—Letter-–number sequencing test; PASAT—Paced auditory serial addition test; Dig Vig—digit vigilance test; Rey AVLT—Rey auditory verbal learning test; SCWT—Stroop color–word interference test; TMT—trail-making test; TAVEC—Spanish version of the California learning verbal test; MMSE—mini-mental-state examination; HVLT-R—Hopkins verbal learning test—revised; ACR—American college of rheumatology; CSI—cognitive symptoms inventory.