4.8 Article

Association of cortical microstructure with amyloid-beta and tau: impact on cognitive decline, neurodegeneration, and clinical progression in older adults

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MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
卷 26, 期 12, 页码 7813-7822

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SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41380-021-01290-z

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资金

  1. US National Institute of Aging-NIH [1R21AG064348-01, R01AG061083]
  2. National Institute on Aging [P01AG036694]
  3. Swedish Alzheimer Foundation (Alzheimerfonden)
  4. Swedish Dementia Foundation (Demensfonden)
  5. Erik and Edith Fernstrom Foundation for Medical Research
  6. Karolinska Institutet Foundations, Sweden
  7. Instituto de Salud Carlos III, Spain [FI18/00275]

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The study found that cortical microstructure independently predicts subsequent cognitive decline, neurodegeneration and clinical progression, suggesting potential utility in clinical trials.
Noninvasive biomarkers of early neuronal injury may help identify cognitively normal individuals at risk of developing Alzheimer's disease (AD). A recent diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI) method allows assessing cortical microstructure via cortical mean diffusivity (cMD), suggested to be more sensitive than macrostructural neurodegeneration. Here, we aimed to investigate the association of cMD with amyloid-beta and tau pathology in older adults, and whether cMD predicts longitudinal cognitive decline, neurodegeneration and clinical progression. The study sample comprised n = 196 cognitively normal older adults (mean[SD] 72.5 [9.4] years; 114 women [58.2%]) from the Harvard Aging Brain Study. At baseline, all participants underwent structural MRI, DWI, C-11-Pittsburgh compound-B-PET, F-18-flortaucipir-PET imaging, and cognitive assessments. Longitudinal measures of Preclinical Alzheimer Cognitive Composite-5 were available for n = 186 individuals over 3.72 (1.96)-year follow-up. Prospective clinical follow-up was available for n = 163 individuals over 3.2 (1.7) years. Surface-based image analysis assessed vertex-wise relationships between cMD, global amyloid-beta, and entorhinal and inferior-temporal tau. Multivariable regression, mixed effects models and Cox proportional hazards regression assessed longitudinal cognition, brain structural changes and clinical progression. Tau, but not amyloid-beta, was positively associated with cMD in AD-vulnerable regions. Correcting for baseline demographics and cognition, increased cMD predicted steeper cognitive decline, which remained significant after correcting for amyloid-beta, thickness, and entorhinal tau; there was a synergistic interaction between cMD and both amyloid-beta and tau on cognitive slope. Regional cMD predicted hippocampal atrophy rate, independently from amyloid-beta, tau, and thickness. Elevated cMD predicted progression to mild cognitive impairment. Cortical microstructure is a noninvasive biomarker that independently predicts subsequent cognitive decline, neurodegeneration and clinical progression, suggesting utility in clinical trials.

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