| Literature DB >> 35327482 |
Nikol Jankovska1, Robert Rusina2, Jiri Keller3,4, Jaromir Kukal5, Magdalena Bruzova1, Eva Parobkova1, Tomas Olejar1, Radoslav Matej1,6,7.
Abstract
Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD), the most common human prion disorder, may occur as "pure" neurodegeneration with isolated prion deposits in the brain tissue; however, comorbid cases with different concomitant neurodegenerative diseases have been reported. This retrospective study examined correlations of clinical, neuropathological, molecular-genetic, immunological, and neuroimaging biomarkers in pure and comorbid CJD. A total of 215 patients have been diagnosed with CJD during the last ten years by the Czech National Center for Prion Disorder Surveillance. Data were collected from all patients with respect to diagnostic criteria for probable CJD, including clinical description, EEG, MRI, and CSF findings. A detailed neuropathological analysis uncovered that only 11.16% were "pure" CJD, while 62.79% had comorbid tauopathy, 20.47% had Alzheimer's disease, 3.26% had frontotemporal lobar degeneration, and 2.33% had synucleinopathy. The comorbid subgroup analysis revealed that tauopathy was linked to putaminal hyperintensity on MRIs, and AD mainly impacted the age of onset, hippocampal atrophy on MRIs, and beta-amyloid levels in the CSF. The retrospective data analysis found a surprisingly high proportion of comorbid neuropathologies; only 11% of cases were verified as "pure" CJD, i.e., lacking hallmarks of other neurodegenerations. Comorbid neuropathologies can impact disease manifestation and can complicate the clinical diagnosis of CJD.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Creutzfeldt–Jakob disease; MRI; beta-amyloid; comorbid neuropathology; tauopathy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35327482 PMCID: PMC8944998 DOI: 10.3390/biomedicines10030680
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biomedicines ISSN: 2227-9059
Summary of available epidemiological, neuropathological, immunological and genetic data in non-comorbid vs. comorbid CJD cases. The first column shows the neuropathological diagnosis of patients, second shows the total number of cases in each group, third indicate the gender distribution (female/male). In the fourth column is age range with median age (in years) and the last two columns show methionine/valine polymorphism and presence of 14-3-3 protein in cerebrospinal fluid examinated by western blot.
| Diagnosis | No. | Sex | Age | Etiology | Genotype | 14-3-3 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CJD | 24 | 24× F | 40–78 | 21× sCJD | 17× MM | 17× positive |
| CJD/tau | 135 | 73× F | 49–87 | 119× sCJD | 85× MM | 106× positive |
| CJD/AD | 44 | 24× F | 56–85 | 41× sCJD | 27× MM | 38× positive |
| CJD/FTLD | 7 | 5× F | 55–78 | 7× sCJD | 4× MM | 6× positive |
| CJD/synuclein | 5 | 3× F | 59–76 | 5× sCJD | 3× MM | 4× positive |
F—female, M—male, MM—Methionine/Methionine polymorphism, MV—Methionine/Valine polymorphism, VV—Valine/Valine polymorphism.
Distribution of MV polymorphisms in pure and comorbid CJD cases.
| Polymorphism | Pure CJD | CJD/tau | CJD/AD | CJD/FTLD | CJD/Synuclein |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MM | 17 | 85 | 27 | 4 | 3 |
| VV | 3 | 16 | 9 | 3 | 2 |
| MV | 4 | 34 | 8 | 0 | 0 |
| TOTAL | 24 | 135 | 44 | 7 | 5 |
VV—Valine/Valine, MM—Methionine/Methionine, MV—Methionine/Valine, total stands for total number of cases in each group.
Numbers (n) and percentage (%) of positive, low positive, negative and unanalysed results of the presence of 14-3-3β, t-tau levels and the combined presence of 14-3-3β and t-tau protein levels in CSF. Percentage is related to the whole cohort.
| 14-3-3β (n) | 14-3-3β (%) | t-tau | t-tau | 14-3-3β + t-tau | 14-3-3β + t-tau | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| pure CJD | pos | 12 | 5.58 | 17 | 7.91 | 11 | 5.12 |
| low pos | 1 | 0.47 | N/A | N/A | 8 | 3.72 | |
| neg | 8 | 3.72 | 3 | 1.40 | 2 | 0.93 | |
| no | 3 | 1.40 | 4 | 1.86 | 3 | 1.40 | |
| CJD/tau | pos | 67 | 31.16 | 92 | 42.79 | 74 | 34.42 |
| low pos | 16 | 7.44 | N/A | N/A | 27 | 12.56 | |
| neg | 27 | 12.56 | 13 | 6.05 | 9 | 4.19 | |
| no | 25 | 11.63 | 30 | 13.95 | 25 | 11.63 | |
| CJD/AD | pos | 24 | 11.16 | 31 | 14.42 | 27 | 12.56 |
| low pos | 5 | 2.33 | N/A | N/A | 6 | 2.79 | |
| neg | 4 | 1.86 | 2 | 0.93 | 0 | 0.00 | |
| no | 11 | 5.12 | 11 | 5.12 | 11 | 5.12 | |
| CJD/FTLD | pos | 6 | 2.79 | 7 | 3.26 | 6 | 2.79 |
| low pos | 0 | 0.00 | N/A | N/A | 1 | 0.47 | |
| neg | 1 | 0.47 | 0 | 0.00 | 0 | 0.00 | |
| no | 0 | 0.00 | 0 | 0.00 | 0 | 0.00 | |
| CJD/synuclein | pos | 2 | 0.93 | 3 | 1.40 | 2 | 0.93 |
| low pos | 0 | 0.00 | N/A | N/A | 1 | 0.47 | |
| neg | 1 | 0.47 | 0 | 0.00 | 0 | 0.00 | |
| no | 2 | 0.93 | 2 | 0.93 | 2 | 0.93 | |
pos = positive; low pos = low positive; neg = negative; no = unanalysed; N/A = not applicable. T-tau cut-off: 1200 pg/mL; lower negative. For the combination of 14-3-3β + t-tau, “pos” means both variables are positive, “low pos” means that one of the variables is positive, and the other is negative.
Figure 1MRI in CJD subjects performed at 1.5T field strength: diffusion-weighed images ((A,B), DWI) with b-factor 1000, FLAIR image (C), coronal T2-weighted images (D–F). In the first column (A,D) data from subject with pure CJD—no DWI hyperintensity in putamina (arrow) is present and MTA is 0 (read as normal). In the second column (B,E) subject with tau comorbidity with mild hippocampal atrophy (MTA 1, arrow on (E)) and DWI (B) hyperintensity in putamina (horizontal arrow), caudates (vertical arrows) and with cortical ribboning (oblique arrow). In the third column (C,F) subject with CJD and AD comorbidity is shown. A moderate hyperintensity is visible not only on DWI (not shown), but as well on FLAIR image (C). Hippocampal atrophy is well pronounced, MTA 2 (arrow from right side of the (F), pointing to the left hippocampus which manifests clear atrophy).
Figure 2(A–C) Immunofluorescence illustration of different patterns of amyloid β (Aβ; red) and prion protein (PrPSc; green) colocalization in compound plaques in comorbid Alzheimer’s (AD) and Creutzfeldt–Jakob diseases (CJD) cases. Primary antibodies: anti-PrP (rabbit recombinant monoclonal antibody) + anti-amyloid β-protein (mouse monoclonal antibody). The secondary antibody was conjugated with either Alexa Fluor® 488 (anti-rabbit IgG; green) or Alexa Fluor® 568 (anti-mouse IgG; red). Scale bar indicates 10 μm. Images come from the hippocampal region (archicortical parts).
Figure 3(A–C) Immunofluorescence illustrates h-tau-positive (red) dystrophic neurites colocalizing with PrPSc (green) extracellular deposits in comorbid CJD/AD cases. Primary antibodies: PrP (rabbit recombinant monoclonal antibody) + AT8 (mouse monoclonal antibody). The secondary antibody was conjugated with either Alexa Fluor® 488 (anti-rabbit IgG, green) or Alexa Fluor® 568 (anti-mouse IgG, red). Scale bars indicate 10 μm. Arrows indicate minor colocalization of AT8 with PrP. Images come from the hippocampal region (archicortical parts).
Figure 4(A,B) Immunofluorescence illustration of the predominance of non-compound or minimal-compound plaques with minimal colocalization of Aβ (red) and PrPSc (green) in the majority of plaques. Primary antibodies: anti-PrP (rabbit recombinant monoclonal antibody) + anti-amyloid β-protein (mouse monoclonal antibody). The secondary antibody was conjugated with either Alexa Fluor® 488 (anti-rabbit IgG; green) or Alexa Fluor® 568 (anti-mouse IgG; red). Scale bars indicate 100 μm. Images come from the hippocampal region (archicortical parts).