Additive effect of cerebral atrophy on cognition in dementia-free elderly with cerebrovascular disease

Author:

Xu XinORCID,Phua April,Collinson Simon L,Hilal Saima,Ikram Mohammad Kamran,Wong Tien Yin,Cheng Ching Yu,Venketasubramanian Narayanaswamy,Chen Christopher

Abstract

ObjectiveTo explore the additive effect of neurodegenerative diseases, measured by atrophy, on neurocognitive function in Asian dementia-free elderly with cerebrovascular disease (CeVD).MethodsThe present study employed a cross-sectional design and was conducted between 2010 and 2015 among community-dwelling elderly participants recruited into the study. Eligible participants were evaluated with an extensive neuropsychological battery and neuroimaging. The weighted CeVD burden scale comprising markers of both small- and large-vessel diseases was applied, with a score of ≥2, indicating significant CeVD burden. Cortical atrophy (CA) and medial temporal atrophy (MTA) were graded using the global cortical atrophy scale and Schelten’s scale, respectively. Global and domain-specific (attention, executive function, language, visuomotor speed, visuoconstruction, visual memory, and verbal memory) neurocognitive performance was measured using a locally validated neuropsychological battery (Vascular Dementia Battery, VDB).ResultsA total of 819 dementia-free participants were included in the analysis. Among none-mild CeVD subjects, there was no significant difference in the global cognitive performance across atrophy groups (no atrophy, CA, and CA+MTA). However, in moderate-severe CeVD subjects, CA+MTA showed significantly worse global cognitive performance compared with those with CA alone (mean difference=−0.35, 95% CI −0.60 to −0.11, p=0.002) and those without atrophy (mean difference=−0.46, 95% CI −0.74 to −0.19, p<0.001, p<0.001). In domain-specific cognitive performance, subjects with CA+MTA performed worse than other groups in visual memory (p=0.005), executive function (p=0.001) and visuomotor speed (p<0.001) in moderate-severe CeVD but not in none-mild CeVD.Conclusions and relevanceAtrophy and moderate-severe CeVD burden showed an additive effect on global and domain-specific cognitive performance. This study highlights the importance of investigating the mechanisms of clinico-pathological interactions between neurodegenerative processes and vascular damage, particularly in the pre-dementia stage.

Funder

NMRC Clinician Scientist Award

NMRC Centre Grant - NUHS - Metabolic Medicine, Infectious Diseases, Neuroscience Enablers

NMRC Centre Grant - Memory Aging and Cognition Centre (MACC) - Theme 5

NUHS Bridging Fund

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Clinical Neurology

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