Symptom‐led staging for semantic and non‐fluent/agrammatic variants of primary progressive aphasia

Author:

Hardy Chris J. D.1,Taylor‐Rubin Cathleen23,Taylor Beatrice4,Harding Emma1,Gonzalez Aida Suarez1,Jiang Jessica1,Thompson Laura2,Kingma Rachel2,Chokesuwattanaskul Anthipa156,Walker Ffion7,Barker Suzie1,Brotherhood Emilie1,Waddington Claire1,Wood Olivia1,Zimmermann Nikki1,Kupeli Nuriye8,Yong Keir X. X.1,Camic Paul M.1,Stott Joshua19,Marshall Charles R.10,Oxtoby Neil P.4,Rohrer Jonathan D.1,Volkmer Anna111,Crutch Sebastian J.1,Warren Jason D.1

Affiliation:

1. Dementia Research Centre UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology UCL London UK

2. Uniting War Memorial Hospital Sydney Australia

3. Faculty of Medicine Health and Human Sciences Macquarie University Sydney Australia

4. Centre for Medical Image Computing Department of Computer Science UCL London UK

5. Division of Neurology Department of Internal Medicine King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital Bangkok Thailand

6. Cognitive Clinical and Computational Neuroscience Research Unit Faculty of Medicine Chulalongkorn University Bangkok Thailand

7. HealthAbility Melbourne Australia

8. Marie Curie Palliative Care Research Department Division of Psychiatry UCL London UK

9. ADAPT Lab Research Department of Clinical Educational and Health Psychology UCL London UK

10. Preventive Neurology Unit Queen Mary University of London London UK

11. Psychology and Language Sciences (PALS) UCL London UK

Abstract

AbstractINTRODUCTIONHere we set out to create a symptom‐led staging system for the canonical semantic and non‐fluent/agrammatic variants of primary progressive aphasia (PPA), which present unique diagnostic and management challenges not well captured by functional scales developed for Alzheimer's disease and other dementias.METHODSAn international PPA caregiver cohort was surveyed on symptom development under six provisional clinical stages and feedback was analyzed using a mixed‐methods sequential explanatory design.RESULTSBoth PPA syndromes were characterized by initial communication dysfunction and non‐verbal behavioral changes, with increasing syndromic convergence and functional dependency at later stages. Milestone symptoms were distilled to create a prototypical progression and severity scale of functional impairment: the PPA Progression Planning Aid (“PPA‐Squared”).DISCUSSIONThis work introduces a symptom‐led staging scheme and functional scale for semantic and non‐fluent/agrammatic variants of PPA. Our findings have implications for diagnostic and care pathway guidelines, trial design, and personalized prognosis and treatment for PPA.Highlights We introduce new symptom‐led perspectives on primary progressive aphasia (PPA). The focus is on non‐fluent/agrammatic (nfvPPA) and semantic (svPPA) variants. Foregrounding of early and non‐verbal features of PPA and clinical trajectories is featured. We introduce a symptom‐led staging scheme for PPA. We propose a prototype for a functional impairment scale, the PPA Progression Planning Aid.

Funder

Alzheimer's Society

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council

Wellcome Trust

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Geriatrics and Gerontology,Neurology (clinical),Developmental Neuroscience,Health Policy,Epidemiology

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