4.5 Article

A beta deposits in older non-demented individuals with cognitive decline are indicative of preclinical Alzheimer's disease

Journal

NEUROPSYCHOLOGIA
Volume 46, Issue 6, Pages 1688-1697

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2008.02.008

Keywords

brain imaging; mild cognitive impairment; amyloid; normal ageing; PiB; positron emission tomography

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Approximately 30% of healthy persons aged over 75 years show AP deposition at autopsy. It is postulated that this represents preclinical Alzheimer's disease (AD). We evaluated the relationship between AP burden as assessed by PiB PET and cognitive decline in a well-characterized, non-demented, elderly cohort. PiB PET studies and cognitive tests were performed on 34 elderly participants (age 73 :L 6) from the longitudinal Melbourne Healthy Aging Study (MRAS). Subjects were classified as being cognitively 'stable' or 'declining' by an independent behavioural neurologist based on clinical assessment and serial word-list recall scores from the preceding 6-10 years. Decline was calculated from the slope of the word-list recall scores. A beta burden was quantified using Standardized Uptake Value normalized to cerebellar cortex. Ten subjects were clinically classified as declining. At the time of the PET scans, three of the declining subjects had mild cognitive impairment, one had AD, and six were declining but remained within the normal range for age on cognitive tests. Declining subjects were much more likely to show cortical PiB binding than stable subjects (70% vs. 17%, respectively). Neocortical A beta burden correlated with word-list recall slopes (r= -0.78) and memory function (r= -0.85) in the declining group. No correlations were observed in the stable group. A beta burden correlated with incident memory impairment and the rate of memory decline in the non-demented ageing population. These observations suggest that neither memory decline nor AP deposition are part of normal ageing and likely represent prectinical AD. Further longitudinal observations are required to confirm this hypothesis. (c) 2008 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

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