| Literature DB >> 35931678 |
Konstantinos Poulakis1, Joana B Pereira2,3, J-Sebastian Muehlboeck2, Lars-Olof Wahlund2, Örjan Smedby4, Giovanni Volpe5, Colin L Masters6, David Ames7,8, Yoshiki Niimi9, Takeshi Iwatsubo9, Daniel Ferreira2,10, Eric Westman2,11.
Abstract
Understanding Alzheimer's disease (AD) heterogeneity is important for understanding the underlying pathophysiological mechanisms of AD. However, AD atrophy subtypes may reflect different disease stages or biologically distinct subtypes. Here we use longitudinal magnetic resonance imaging data (891 participants with AD dementia, 305 healthy control participants) from four international cohorts, and longitudinal clustering to estimate differential atrophy trajectories from the age of clinical disease onset. Our findings (in amyloid-β positive AD patients) show five distinct longitudinal patterns of atrophy with different demographical and cognitive characteristics. Some previously reported atrophy subtypes may reflect disease stages rather than distinct subtypes. The heterogeneity in atrophy rates and cognitive decline within the five longitudinal atrophy patterns, potentially expresses a complex combination of protective/risk factors and concomitant non-AD pathologies. By alternating between the cross-sectional and longitudinal understanding of AD subtypes these analyses may allow better understanding of disease heterogeneity.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35931678 PMCID: PMC9355993 DOI: 10.1038/s41467-022-32202-6
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Commun ISSN: 2041-1723 Impact factor: 17.694