Comorbid cerebrovascular and neurodegenerative burden in mild behavioural impairment and their impact on clinical trajectory

轻度行为障碍合并脑血管疾病和神经退行性疾病负担及其对临床病程的影响

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Abstract

AIM: Mild behavioural impairment (MBI) is a neurobehavioral prodrome to dementia with multiple phenotypic characteristics. To investigate the complex neurobiological substrate underlying MBI, we evaluated its association with a composite magnetic resonance imaging (MRI)-based measure of concomitant cerebrovascular disease (CeVD) and neurodegeneration; and the interaction effects of MBI and MRI scores on cognitive and clinical trajectory. METHODS: 253 dementia-free participants (mean age = 71.9, follow-up period = 49.89 months) from 2 memory clinics were included in this study. 37 (14.6%) participants met clinical diagnostic criteria for MBI, ascertained by repeated neuropsychiatric inventory assessments. MRI scores were computed using a validated weighted sum of white matter hyperintensities volume, presence of infarct, hippocampal volume, and cortical thickness of known Alzheimer’s disease-associated regions. Clinical and cognitive outcomes were evaluated annually using the Clinical Dementia Rating sum-of-boxes (CDR-SB) and standardised global cognitive scores of a comprehensive neuropsychological battery respectively. RESULTS: Lower MRI scores, indicating greater burden of comorbid CeVD and neurodegeneration, yielded a 3.8-fold likelihood of MBI compared to 1.5-fold with larger WMH volume or lower cortical thickness individually. Interaction analyses showed that MBI participants with low MRI scores had greater increase in CDR-SB (B = 0.05, SE = 0.01, p < 0.001) over time. All models involving the composite MRI measure yielded a better fit compared to reduced models with either pathology alone. CONCLUSION: MBI is associated with a composite MRI measure that reflects mixed pathologies of dementia and their co-evaluation may improve risk profiling and identification of memory clinic patients without dementia who are at the highest risk of experiencing clinical decline.

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