Latent atrophy factors related to phenotypical variants of posterior cortical atrophy

Author:

Groot Colin,Yeo B.T. ThomasORCID,Vogel Jacob W.,Zhang XiumingORCID,Sun Nanbo,Mormino Elizabeth C.,Pijnenburg Yolande A.L.ORCID,Miller Bruce L.,Rosen Howard J.,La Joie RenaudORCID,Barkhof FrederikORCID,Scheltens PhilipORCID,van der Flier Wiesje M.ORCID,Rabinovici Gil D.,Ossenkoppele Rik

Abstract

ObjectiveTo determine whether atrophy relates to phenotypical variants of posterior cortical atrophy (PCA) recently proposed in clinical criteria (i.e., dorsal, ventral, dominant-parietal, and caudal) we assessed associations between latent atrophy factors and cognition.MethodsWe employed a data-driven Bayesian modeling framework based on latent Dirichlet allocation to identify latent atrophy factors in a multicenter cohort of 119 individuals with PCA (age 64 ± 7 years, 38% male, Mini-Mental State Examination 21 ± 5, 71% β-amyloid positive, 29% β-amyloid status unknown). The model uses standardized gray matter density images as input (adjusted for age, sex, intracranial volume, MRI scanner field strength, and whole-brain gray matter volume) and provides voxelwise probabilistic maps for a predetermined number of atrophy factors, allowing every individual to express each factor to a degree without a priori classification. Individual factor expressions were correlated to 4 PCA-specific cognitive domains (object perception, space perception, nonvisual/parietal functions, and primary visual processing) using general linear models.ResultsThe model revealed 4 distinct yet partially overlapping atrophy factors: right-dorsal, right-ventral, left-ventral, and limbic. We found that object perception and primary visual processing were associated with atrophy that predominantly reflects the right-ventral factor. Furthermore, space perception was associated with atrophy that predominantly represents the right-dorsal and right-ventral factors. However, individual participant profiles revealed that the large majority expressed multiple atrophy factors and had mixed clinical profiles with impairments across multiple domains, rather than displaying a discrete clinical–radiologic phenotype.ConclusionOur results indicate that specific brain behavior networks are vulnerable in PCA, but most individuals display a constellation of affected brain regions and symptoms, indicating that classification into 4 mutually exclusive variants is unlikely to be clinically useful.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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