4.7 Article

Clinical and neuroanatomical signatures of tissue pathology in frontotemporal lobar degeneration

Journal

BRAIN
Volume 134, Issue -, Pages 2565-2581

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/brain/awr198

Keywords

frontotemporal dementia; frontotemporal lobar degeneration; voxel-based morphometry; MRI; neural network

Funding

  1. Department of Health's NIHR Biomedical Research Centres
  2. Medical Research Council UK
  3. Alzheimer's Research UK
  4. Wellcome Trust
  5. Alzheimers Research UK [ART-PG2010-1, ART-PPG2011A-14, ART-PhD2007-2] Funding Source: researchfish
  6. Medical Research Council [G0601846, G0600676, G0501560, G0701075, MC_U123160651, G0801306, MC_U123182015] Funding Source: researchfish
  7. National Institute for Health Research [NF-SI-0508-10123] Funding Source: researchfish
  8. MRC [G0501560, G0701075, MC_U123160651, MC_U123182015, G0601846, G0600676, G0801306] Funding Source: UKRI

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Relating clinical symptoms to neuroanatomical profiles of brain damage and ultimately to tissue pathology is a key challenge in the field of neurodegenerative disease and particularly relevant to the heterogeneous disorders that comprise the frontotemporal lobar degeneration spectrum. Here we present a retrospective analysis of clinical, neuropsychological and neuroimaging (volumetric and voxel-based morphometric) features in a pathologically ascertained cohort of 95 cases of frontotemporal lobar degeneration classified according to contemporary neuropathological criteria. Forty-eight cases (51%) had TDP-43 pathology, 42 (44%) had tau pathology and five (5%) had fused-in-sarcoma pathology. Certain relatively specific clinicopathological associations were identified. Semantic dementia was predominantly associated with TDP-43 type C pathology; frontotemporal dementia and motoneuron disease with TDP-43 type B pathology; young-onset behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia with FUS pathology; and the progressive supranuclear palsy syndrome with progressive supranuclear palsy pathology. Progressive non-fluent aphasia was most commonly associated with tau pathology. However, the most common clinical syndrome (behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia) was pathologically heterogeneous; while pathologically proven Pick's disease and corticobasal degeneration were clinically heterogeneous, and TDP-43 type A pathology was associated with similar clinical features in cases with and without progranulin mutations. Volumetric magnetic resonance imaging, voxel-based morphometry and cluster analyses of the pathological groups here suggested a neuroanatomical framework underpinning this clinical and pathological diversity. Frontotemporal lobar degeneration-associated pathologies segregated based on their cerebral atrophy profiles, according to the following scheme: asymmetric, relatively localized (predominantly temporal lobe) atrophy (TDP-43 type C); relatively symmetric, relatively localized (predominantly temporal lobe) atrophy (microtubule-associated protein tau mutations); strongly asymmetric, distributed atrophy (Pick's disease); relatively symmetric, predominantly extratemporal atrophy (corticobasal degeneration, fused-in-sarcoma pathology). TDP-43 type A pathology was associated with substantial individual variation; however, within this group progranulin mutations were associated with strongly asymmetric, distributed hemispheric atrophy. We interpret the findings in terms of emerging network models of neurodegenerative disease: the neuroanatomical specificity of particular frontotemporal lobar degeneration pathologies may depend on an interaction of disease-specific and network-specific factors.

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