VentRa: distinguishing frontotemporal dementia from psychiatric disorders

Author:

Manera Ana L1ORCID,Dadar Mahsa12ORCID,Ducharme Simon12ORCID,Collins D Louis1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. McConnell Brain Imaging Centre, Montreal Neurological Institute, McGill University , Montreal, QC H3A 2B4 , Canada

2. Department of Psychiatry, Douglas Mental Health University Health Centre, McGill University , Montreal, QC H4H 1R3 , Canada

Abstract

Abstract The volume of the lateral ventricles is a reliable and sensitive indicator of brain atrophy and disease progression in behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia. In this study, we validate our previously developed automated tool using ventricular features (known as VentRa) for the classification of behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia versus a mixed cohort of neurodegenerative, vascular and psychiatric disorders from a clinically representative independent dataset. Lateral ventricles were segmented for 1110 subjects—14 behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia, 30 other frontotemporal dementia, 70 Lewy body disease, 898 Alzheimer’s disease, 62 vascular brain injury and 36 primary psychiatric disorder from the publicly accessible National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center dataset to assess the performance of VentRa. Using ventricular features to discriminate behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia subjects from primary psychiatric disorders, VentRa achieved an accuracy rate of 84%, a sensitivity rate of 71% and a specificity rate of 89%. VentRa was able to identify behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia from a mixed age–matched cohort (i.e. other frontotemporal dementia, Lewy body disease, Alzheimer’s disease, vascular brain injury and primary psychiatric disorders) and to correctly classify other disorders as ‘not compatible with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia’ with a specificity rate of 83%. The specificity rates against each of the other individual cohorts were 80% for other frontotemporal dementia, 83% for Lewy body disease, 83% for Alzheimer’s disease, 84% for vascular brain injury and 89% for primary psychiatric disorders. VentRa is a robust and generalizable tool with potential usefulness for improving the diagnostic certainty of behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia, particularly for the differential diagnosis with primary psychiatric disorders.

Funder

Healthy Brains for Healthy Lives

Alzheimer Society Research Program

Douglas Research Centre

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Canadian National Science and Engineering Research Council

Brain Canada

Weston Foundation

Famille Louise & André Charron

Fonds de Recherche du Québec—Santé

National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center

National Institute on Aging

National Institutes of Health

Alzheimer’s Disease Centers

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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