Divergent cognitive trajectories in early stage Huntington's disease: A 3‐year longitudinal study

Author:

Martínez‐Horta Saul1234ORCID,Perez‐Perez Jesús1234,Oltra‐Cucarella Javier5,Sampedro Frederic123ORCID,Horta‐Barba Andrea1234ORCID,Puig‐Davi Arnau1234ORCID,Pagonabarraga Javier123,Kulisevsky Jaime1234

Affiliation:

1. Movement Disorders Unit, Neurology Department, Hospital de la Santa Creu i Sant Pau Barcelona Spain

2. Biomedical Research Institute (IIB‐Sant Pau) Barcelona Spain

3. Centro de Investigación en Red‐Enfermedades Neurodegenerativas Madrid Spain

4. European Huntington's Disease Network Ulm Spain

5. Departamento de Psicología de la Salud Universidad Miguel Hernández de Elche Elche Spain

Abstract

AbstractBackground and purposeCognitive impairment is a central feature of Huntington's disease (HD), but it is unclear to what extent more aggressive cognitive phenotypes exist in HD among individuals with the same genetic load and equivalence in other clinical and sociodemographic variables.MethodsWe included Enroll‐HD study participants in early and early–mid stages of HD at baseline and with three consecutive yearly follow‐ups for whom several clinical and sociodemographic as well as cognitive measures were recorded. We excluded participants with low and large CAG repeat length (CAG < 39 & > 55), with juvenile or late onset HD, and with dementia at baseline. We explored the existence of different groups according to the profile of cognitive progression using a two‐step k‐means cluster analysis model based on the combination of different cognitive outcomes.ResultsWe identified a slow cognitive progression group of 293 participants and an aggressive progression group (F‐CogHD) of 235 for which there were no differences at the baseline visit in any of the measures explored, with the exception of a slightly higher motor score in the F‐CogHD group. This group showed a more pronounced annual loss of functionality and a more marked motor and psychiatric deterioration.ConclusionsThe rate of progression of cognitive deterioration in HD is strongly variable even between patients sharing, among other variables, equivalent CAG repeat length, age, and disease duration. We can recognize at least two phenotypes that differ in terms of rate of progression. Our findings open new avenues to study additional mechanisms contributing to HD heterogeneity.

Funder

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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