Neuropsychiatric symptoms in genetic frontotemporal dementia: developing a new module for Clinical Rating Scales

Author:

Samra KiranORCID,Macdougall Amy,Peakman GeorgiaORCID,Bouzigues Arabella,Bocchetta MartinaORCID,Cash David M,Greaves Caroline V,Convery Rhian SORCID,van Swieten John CORCID,Jiskoot Lize CORCID,Seelaar HarroORCID,Moreno Fermin,Sánchez-Valle Raquel,Laforce Robert,Graff Caroline,Masellis Mario,Tartaglia Maria Carmela,Rowe James BORCID,Borroni BarbaraORCID,Finger ElizabethORCID,Synofzik MatthisORCID,Galimberti DanielaORCID,Vandenberghe Rik,de Mendonca Alexandre,Butler Christopher R,Gerhard AlexanderORCID,Ducharme SimonORCID,Le Ber IsabelleORCID,Tiraboschi PietroORCID,Santana Isabel,Pasquier Florence,Levin Johannes,Otto Markus,Sorbi SandroORCID,Rohrer Jonathan DORCID,Russell Lucy L

Abstract

BackgroundCurrent clinical rating scales in frontotemporal dementia (FTD) often do not incorporate neuropsychiatric features and may therefore inadequately measure disease stage.Methods832 participants from the Genetic FTD Initiative (GENFI) were recruited: 522 mutation carriers and 310 mutation-negative controls. The standardised GENFI clinical questionnaire assessed the frequency and severity of 14 neuropsychiatric symptoms: visual, auditory, and tactile hallucinations, delusions, depression, anxiety, irritability/lability, agitation/aggression, euphoria/elation, aberrant motor behaviour, hypersexuality, hyperreligiosity, impaired sleep, and altered sense of humour. A principal component analysis (PCA) was performed to identify key groupings of neuropsychiatric and behavioural items in order to create a new neuropsychiatric module that could be used as an addition to the Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) plus National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center Behaviour and Language Domains (NACC FTLD) rating scale.ResultsOverall, 46.4% of mutation carriers had neuropsychiatric symptoms (51.6%C9orf72, 40.8%GRN, 46.6%MAPT) compared with 24.5% of controls. Anxiety and depression were the most common in all genetic groups but fluctuated longitudinally and loaded separately in the PCA. Hallucinations and delusions loaded together, with the remaining neuropsychiatric symptoms loading with the core behavioural features of FTD. These results suggest using a single ‘psychosis’ neuropsychiatric module consisting of hallucinations and delusions. Adding this to the CDR plus NACC FTLD, called the CDR plus NACC FTLD-N, leads to a number of participants being scored more severely, including those who were previously considered asymptomatic now being scored as prodromal.ConclusionsNeuropsychiatric symptoms occur in mutation carriers at all disease stages across all three genetic groups. However, only psychosis features provided additional staging benefit to the CDR plus NACC FTLD. Inclusion of these features brings us closer to optimising the rating scale for use in trials.

Funder

Italian Ministry of Health

Bluefield Project

National Brain Appeal

Alzheimer's Society

Karolinska Institutet

London Hospitals Biomedical Research Centre, the Leonard Wolfson Experimental Neurology Centre

GENFI

JPND Prefrontals

UK Dementia Research Institute

The Wolfson Foundation

Germany’s Excellence Strategy

Wellcome Trust

European Reference Network for Rare Neurological Diseases

JPND-GENFI-PROX

Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft

University College London Hospitals Biomedical Research Centre

NIHR Rare Disease Translational Research Collaboration

Miriam Marks Brain Research UK Senior Fellowship

Alzheimer's Research Trust

Instituto de Salud Carlos III

Fundació la Marató de TV3

Mady Browaeys Fund for Research into Frontotemporal Dementia

Association for Frontotemporal Dementias Research

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Medical Research Council

National Institute for Health Research Queen Square Dementia Biomedical Research Unit

National Institute for Health Research

National Institute for Health Research Cambridge Biomedical Research Centre

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Surgery

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