Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychology, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom
2. Department of Neuroscience, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, United Kingdom
Abstract
Introduction:
Responsiveness to treatment with cholinesterase inhibitors (ChEIs) is difficult
to predict in Alzheimer’s disease (AD). In the current review, vascular burden is considered as a potential
moderator of treatment responsiveness. Cerebrovascular burden co-occurs in at least 30% of AD
brains, although it is debated if vascular pathology plays a causal or synergistic role in AD pathogenesis.
Vascular burden, therefore, could potentially limit response to treatment due to limited brain reserve
or foster treatment efficacy as those with vascular pathology may represent a subgroup with
comparable clinical expression but less progressed AD neurodegeneration.
Methods:
A systematic search of Web of Science, Pubmed, Scopus and EthoS identified 32 papers
which met the criteria for inclusion. Association of treatment response and vascular burden across five
broad markers are discussed: cerebral hypoperfusion, intima-media thickness, white matter changes,
cerebral microbleeds and co-existing diagnosis of cerebrovascular disease.
Results:
Analysis of frontal regional cerebral blood flow and intima-media thickness may have predictive
ability to distinguish those with AD who may respond optimally to short-term treatment with
ChEIs. The impact of white matter changes is less consistent; the majority of studies demonstrates no
association with treatment response and those that do implicate changes in executive functioning.
There is preliminary evidence that deep cerebral microbleeds limit treatment response in subcortical
cognitive domains, but this finding requires replication. The use of diagnosis of co-occurring cerebrovascular
disease yields no robust variability in response to ChEIs in AD.
Conclusion:
There is limited evidence that markers of cerebral hypoperfusion, intima-media thickness
and cerebral microbleeds moderate response to ChEIs. Findings for other markers of vascular burden
are less consistent and do not support any moderating effect.
Publisher
Bentham Science Publishers Ltd.
Subject
Neurology (clinical),Neurology
Cited by
1 articles.
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