Author:
Brickman Adam M.,Tosto Giuseppe,Gutierrez Jose,Andrews Howard,Gu Yian,Narkhede Atul,Rizvi Batool,Guzman Vanessa,Manly Jennifer J.,Vonsattel Jean Paul,Schupf Nicole,Mayeux Richard
Abstract
ObjectiveTo develop, replicate, and validate an MRI-based quantitative measure of both cerebrovascular and neurodegeneration in Alzheimer disease (AD) for clinical and potentially research purposes.MethodsWe used data from a cross-sectional and longitudinal community-based study of Medicare-eligible residents in northern Manhattan followed every 18–24 months (n = 1,175, mean age 78 years). White matter hyperintensities, infarcts, hippocampal volumes, and cortical thicknesses were quantified from MRI and combined to generate an MRI measure associated with episodic memory. The combined MRI measure was replicated and validated using autopsy data, clinical diagnoses, and CSF biomarkers and amyloid PET from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative.ResultsThe quantitative MRI measure was developed in a group of community participants (n = 690) and replicated in a similar second group (n = 485). Compared with healthy controls, the quantitative MRI measure was lower in patients with mild cognitive impairment and lower still in those with clinically diagnosed AD. The quantitative MRI measure correlated with neurofibrillary tangles, neuronal loss, atrophy, and infarcts at postmortem in an autopsy subset and was also associated with PET amyloid imaging and CSF levels of total tau, phosphorylated tau, and β-amyloid 42. The MRI measure predicted conversion to MCI and clinical AD among healthy controls.ConclusionWe developed, replicated, and validated an MRI measure of cerebrovascular and neurodegenerative pathologies that are associated with clinical and neuropathologic diagnosis of AD and related to established biomarkers.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
57 articles.
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