Publication: Does amyloid deposition produce a specific atrophic signature in cognitively normal subjects?☆
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Date
2013
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Elsevier
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Citation
Whitwell, J. L., N. Tosakulwong, S. D. Weigand, M. L. Senjem, V. J. Lowe, J. L. Gunter, B. F. Boeve, et al. 2013. “Does amyloid deposition produce a specific atrophic signature in cognitively normal subjects?☆.” NeuroImage : Clinical 2 (1): 249-257. doi:10.1016/j.nicl.2013.01.006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2013.01.006.
Research Data
Abstract
The objective of our study was to evaluate whether cognitively normal (CN) elderly participants showing elevated cortical beta-amyloid (Aβ) deposition have a consistent neuroanatomical signature of brain atrophy that may characterize preclinical Alzheimer's disease (AD). 115 CN participants who were Aβ-positive (CN +) by amyloid PET imaging; 115 CN participants who were Aβ-negative (CN −); and 88 Aβ-positive mild cognitive impairment or AD participants (MCI/AD +) were identified. Cortical thickness (FreeSurfer) and gray matter volume (SPM5) were measured for 28 regions-of-interest (ROIs) across the brain and compared across groups. ROIs that best discriminated CN − from CN + differed for FreeSurfer cortical thickness and SPM5 gray matter volume. Group-wise discrimination was poor with a high degree of uncertainty in terms of the rank ordering of ROIs. In contrast, both techniques showed strong and consistent findings comparing MCI/AD + to both CN − and CN + groups, with entorhinal cortex, middle and inferior temporal lobe, inferior parietal lobe, and hippocampus providing the best discrimination for both techniques. Concordance across techniques was higher for the CN − and CN + versus MCI/AD + comparisons, compared to the CN − versus CN + comparison. The weak and inconsistent nature of the findings across technique in this study cast doubt on the existence of a reliable neuroanatomical signature of preclinical AD in elderly PiB-positive CN participants.
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Keywords
Amyloid, Preclinical, Alzheimer's disease, Freesurfer, Voxel-based morphometry, Cognitively normal
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