Differentiating cognitive impairment due to corticobasal degeneration and Alzheimer disease

Author:

Day Gregory S.,Lim Tae Sung,Hassenstab Jason,Goate Alison M.,Grant Elizabeth A.,Roe Catherine M.,Cairns Nigel J.,Morris John C.

Abstract

Objective:To identify clinical features that reliably differentiate individuals with cognitive impairment due to corticobasal degeneration (CBD) and Alzheimer disease (AD).Methods:Clinical features were compared between individuals with autopsy-proven CBD (n = 17) and AD (n = 16). All individuals presented with prominent cognitive complaints and were evaluated annually with semistructured interviews, detailed neurologic examinations, and neuropsychological testing.Results:Substantial overlap was observed between individuals with dementia due to CBD and AD concerning presenting complaints, median (range) duration of symptoms before assessment (CBD = 3.0 [0–5.0] years, AD = 2.5 [0–8.0] years; p = 0.96), and median (range) baseline dementia severity (Clinical Dementia Rating Sum of Boxes: CBD = 3.5 [0–12.0], AD = 4.25 [0.5–9.0], p = 0.49). Subsequent emergence of asymmetric motor/sensory signs, hyperreflexia, gait abnormalities, parkinsonism, falls, urinary incontinence, and extraocular movement abnormalities identified individuals with CBD, with ≥3 discriminating features detected in 80% of individuals within 3.1 years (95% confidence interval 2.9–3.3) of the initial assessment. Individuals with CBD exhibited accelerated worsening of illness severity and declines in episodic memory, executive functioning, and letter fluency. Semiquantitative pathologic assessment revealed prominent tau pathology within the frontal and parietal lobes of CBD cases. Comorbid AD neuropathologic change was present in 59% (10 of 17) of CBD cases but did not associate with the clinical phenotype, rate of dementia progression, or dementia duration.Conclusions:CBD may mimic AD dementia early in its disease course. Interval screening for discriminating clinical features may improve antemortem diagnosis in individuals with CBD and prominent cognitive symptoms.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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