Tau accumulation and its spatial progression across the Alzheimer’s disease spectrum

Author:

St-Onge Frédéric12ORCID,Chapleau Marianne3,Breitner John C S24,Villeneuve Sylvia245,Pichet Binette Alexa6

Affiliation:

1. Integrated Program in Neuroscience, Faculty of Medicine, McGill University , Montreal, QC H3A 2B4 , Canada

2. Research Center of the Douglas Mental Health University Institute , Montreal, QC H4H 1R3 , Canada

3. Faculty of Medicine, University of California San Francisco , San Francisco, CA 94143 , USA

4. Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, McGill University , Montreal, QC H3A 1Y2 , Canada

5. McConnell Brain Imaging Centre, Montreal Neurological Institute , Montreal, QC H3A 2B4 , Canada

6. Clinical Memory Research Unit, Faculty of Medicine, Lund University , Malmö 205 02 , Sweden

Abstract

Abstract The accumulation of tau abnormality in sporadic Alzheimer’s disease is believed typically to follow neuropathologically defined Braak staging. Recent in-vivo PET evidence challenges this belief, however, as accumulation patterns for tau appear heterogeneous among individuals with varying clinical expressions of Alzheimer’s disease. We, therefore, sought a better understanding of the spatial distribution of tau in the preclinical and clinical phases of sporadic Alzheimer’s disease and its association with cognitive decline. Longitudinal tau-PET data (1370 scans) from 832 participants (463 cognitively unimpaired, 277 with mild cognitive impairment and 92 with Alzheimer’s disease dementia) were obtained from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative. Among these, we defined thresholds of abnormal tau deposition in 70 brain regions from the Desikan atlas, and for each group of regions characteristic of Braak staging. We summed each scan’s number of regions with abnormal tau deposition to form a spatial extent index. We then examined patterns of tau pathology cross-sectionally and longitudinally and assessed their heterogeneity. Finally, we compared our spatial extent index of tau uptake with a temporal meta-region of interest—a commonly used proxy of tau burden—assessing their association with cognitive scores and clinical progression. More than 80% of amyloid-beta positive participants across diagnostic groups followed typical Braak staging, both cross-sectionally and longitudinally. Within each Braak stage, however, the pattern of abnormality demonstrated significant heterogeneity such that the overlap of abnormal regions across participants averaged less than 50%, particularly in persons with mild cognitive impairment. Accumulation of tau progressed more rapidly among cognitively unimpaired and participants with mild cognitive impairment (1.2 newly abnormal regions per year) compared to participants with Alzheimer’s disease dementia (less than 1 newly abnormal region per year). Comparing the association of tau pathology and cognitive performance our spatial extent index was superior to the temporal meta-region of interest for identifying associations with memory in cognitively unimpaired individuals and explained more variance for measures of executive function in patients with mild cognitive impairments and Alzheimer’s disease dementia. Thus, while participants broadly followed Braak stages, significant individual regional heterogeneity of tau binding was observed at each clinical stage. Progression of the spatial extent of tau pathology appears to be fastest in cognitively unimpaired and persons with mild cognitive impairment. Exploring the spatial distribution of tau deposits throughout the entire brain may uncover further pathological variations and their correlation with cognitive impairments.

Funder

Fonds de Recherche en Santé—Québec

Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative

National Institute on Aging

National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

AbbVie

Alzheimer's Association

Alzheimer's Drug Discovery Foundation

Araclon Biotech

BioClinica, Inc.

Biogen

BristolMyers Squibb Company

CereSpir, Inc.

Cogstate

Eisai Inc

Elan Pharmaceuticals, Inc.

Eli Lilly and Company

EuroImmun

F. Hoffmann-LaRoche Ltdand its affiliated company Genentech, Inc

Fujirebio

GE Healthcare

IXICO Ltd

Janssen Alzheimer Immunotherapy Research And Development

Johnson & Johnson Pharmaceutical Research & Development LLC

Lumosity

Lundbeck Foundation

Merck

MesoScale Diagnostics, LLC

NeuroRxResearch

Neurotrack Technologies

Novartis Pharmaceuticals Corporation

Pfizer Inc.

Piramal Imaging

Servier

Takeda Pharmaceutical Company

Transition Therapeutics

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

National Institutes of Health

Northern California Institute for Research and Education

Alzheimer's Therapeutic Research Institute

University of Southern California

Laboratory for Neuro Imaging

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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