4.6 Article

Potential Predictors for Cognitive Decline in Vascular Dementia: A Machine Learning Analysis

Journal

PROCESSES
Volume 10, Issue 10, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/pr10102088

Keywords

machine learning; dementia; vascular dementia; Alzheimer; cognitive impairment; artificial intelligence; biomarkers; gender; vitamin D; folate

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Vascular dementia is a cognitive impairment associated with age and vascular etiology, typically occurring when brain vessels suffer micro-accidents leading to insufficient oxygen and nutrient supply to the brain. Machine learning methods can be utilized to identify predictive biomarkers for cognitive worsening early on, helping save time and money, and reducing the burden on patients.
Vascular dementia (VD) is a cognitive impairment typical of advanced age with vascular etiology. It results from several vascular micro-accidents involving brain vessels carrying less oxygen and nutrients than it needs. This being a degenerative disease, the diagnosis often arrives too late, when the brain tissue is already damaged. Thus, prevention is the best solution to avoid irreversible cognitive impairment in patients with specific risk factors. Using the machine learning (ML) approach, our group evaluated Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) changes in patients affected by Alzheimer's disease by considering different clinical parameters. We decided to apply a similar ML scheme to VD due to the consistent data obtained from the first work, including the assessment of various ML models (LASSO, RIDGE, Elastic Net, CART, Random Forest) for the outcome prediction (i.e., the MMSE modification throughout time). MMSE at recruitment, folate, MCV, PTH, creatinine, vitamin B12, TSH, and hemoglobinwere the best predictive parameters individuated by the best ML model: Random Forest. ML results can be useful inidentify predictive biomarkers for cognitive worsening in VD early and also for focusing on necessary examinations at the first visits to draw the most predictive features, saving time and money and reducethe burden on the patients themselves. Such results should be integrated with brain imaging, physiological signal measurements, and sensory patterns, particularly forthose senses already demonstrated to have a significant link with neurodegeneration. Adjusting compound deficit by administering nutraceuticals could support treatment effectiveness and lead to a better quality of life for patients, families, and caregivers, with a consistent impact on the national health systems load.

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