White Matter Lesion Progression in LADIS

Author:

Schmidt Reinhold1,Berghold Andrea1,Jokinen Hanna1,Gouw Alida A.1,van der Flier Wiesje M.1,Barkhof Frederik1,Scheltens Philip1,Petrovic Katja1,Madureira Sofia1,Verdelho Ana1,Ferro Jose M.1,Waldemar Gunhild1,Wallin Anders1,Wahlund Lars-Olof1,Poggesi Anna1,Pantoni Leonardo1,Inzitari Domenico1,Fazekas Franz1,Erkinjuntti Timo1

Affiliation:

1. From the Department of Neurology (R.S., K.P., F.F.) and Institute for Medical Informatics (A.B.), Statistics and Documentation Medical University Graz, Austria; Department of Neurology (H.J., T.E.), Helsinki University Central Hospital and Department of Neurological Sciences, University Helsinki, Finland; Alzheimer Center (A.A.G., W.M.v.d.F., P.S.) and Department of Radiology (F.B.), VU University Medical Center, Amsterdam, the Netherlands; Serviço de Neurologia (S.M., A.V., J.M.F.), Centro de...

Abstract

Background and Purpose— White matter lesion (WML) progression has been advocated as a surrogate marker in intervention trials on cerebral small vessel disease. We assessed the rate of visually rated WML progression, studied correlations between lesion progression and cognition, and estimated sample sizes for clinical trials with pure WML progression vs combined WML progression-cognitive outcomes. Methods— Those 394 participants of the Leukoaraiosis and Disability Study (LADIS) study with magnetic resonance imaging scanning at baseline and 3-year follow-up were analyzed. WML progression rating relied on the modified Rotterdam Progression Scale. The Vascular Dementia Assessment Scale global score and a composite score of specific executive function tests assessed longitudinal change in cognition. Sample size calculations were based on the assumption that treatment reduces WML progression by 1 grade on the Rotterdam Progression Scale. Results— WML progression related to deterioration in cognitive functioning. This relationship was less pronounced in subjects with early confluent and confluent lesions. Consequently, studies in which the outcome is cognitive change resulting from treatment effects on lesion progression will need between 1809 subjects per treatment arm when using executive tests and up to 18 853 subjects when using the Vascular Dementia Assessment Scale score. Studies having WML progression as the sole outcome will need only 58 or 70 individuals per treatment arm. Conclusions— WML progression is an interesting outcome for proof-of-concept studies in cerebral small vessel disease. If cognitive outcome measures are added to protocols, then sample size estimates increase substantially. Our data support the use of an executive test battery rather than the Vascular Dementia Assessment Scale as the primary cognitive outcome measure.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Advanced and Specialized Nursing,Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

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