Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Patients with progressive apraxia of speech (PAOS) often develop atypical parkinsonian features suggestive of corticobasal syndrome (CBS) or progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP), and typically have an underlying 4-repeat tauopathy at autopsy. We describe three cases of PAOS with underlying Pick's disease, a 3-repeat tauopathy, who lacked CBS or PSP features during life. METHODS: We reviewed patients enrolled in the Neurodegenerative Research Group's ongoing studies on speech and language disorders and identified those with PAOS who had autopsy-confirmed Pick's disease. All patients had comprehensive neurologic, speech-language, and neuropsychological assessments, as well as multimodal neuroimaging, during life. RESULTS: Three female patients presented with phonetic PAOS without parkinsonism. Patient 1 had speech onset at age 54, later developed behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD), and died at 64. Patient 2 had speech onset at 47, early bvFTD features, prominent frontal and temporal involvement, and died at 53. Patient 3 had speech onset at 58, minimal behavioral changes, primarily frontal involvement on imaging, and died at 63. CONCLUSION: Our findings highlight that Pick's disease can present with PAOS and may be distinguished from 4R-tau PAOS by an absence of motoric CBS/PSP features and, in some cases, by prominent temporal hypometabolism with bvFTD development. These atypical features may prove useful in the antemortem identification of Pick's disease as a cause of PAOS.