Basal forebrain volume reliably predicts the cortical spread of Alzheimer’s degeneration

Author:

Fernández-Cabello Sara12,Kronbichler Martin123,Van Dijk Koene R A4,Goodman James A4,Spreng R Nathan5678,Schmitz Taylor W910ORCID,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, University of Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria

2. Centre for Cognitive Neuroscience, University of Salzburg, Salzburg, Austria

3. Neuroscience Institute, Christian-Doppler Medical Centre, Paracelsus Medical University, Salzburg, Austria

4. Clinical and Translational Imaging, Early Clinical Development, Pfizer Inc, Cambridge, MA, USA

5. Laboratory of Brain and Cognition, Montreal Neurological Institute, Department of Neurology and Neurosurgery, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada

6. Departments of Psychiatry and Psychology, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada

7. Douglas Mental Health University Institute, Verdun, QC, Canada

8. McConnell Brain Imaging Centre, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada

9. Brain and Mind Institute, Western University, London, ON, Canada

10. Department of Physiology and Pharmacology, Western University, London, ON, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Alzheimer’s disease neurodegeneration is thought to spread across anatomically and functionally connected brain regions. However, the precise sequence of spread remains ambiguous. The prevailing model used to guide in vivo human neuroimaging and non-human animal research assumes that Alzheimer’s degeneration starts in the entorhinal cortices, before spreading to the temporoparietal cortex. Challenging this model, we previously provided evidence that in vivo markers of neurodegeneration within the nucleus basalis of Meynert (NbM), a subregion of the basal forebrain heavily populated by cortically projecting cholinergic neurons, precedes and predicts entorhinal degeneration. There have been few systematic attempts at directly comparing staging models using in vivo longitudinal biomarker data, and none to our knowledge testing if comparative evidence generalizes across independent samples. Here we addressed the sequence of pathological staging in Alzheimer’s disease using two independent samples of the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (n1 = 284; n2 = 553) with harmonized CSF assays of amyloid-β and hyperphosphorylated tau (pTau), and longitudinal structural MRI data over 2 years. We derived measures of grey matter degeneration in a priori NbM and the entorhinal cortical regions of interest. To examine the spreading of degeneration, we used a predictive modelling strategy that tests whether baseline grey matter volume in a seed region accounts for longitudinal change in a target region. We demonstrated that predictive spread favoured the NbM→entorhinal over the entorhinal→NbM model. This evidence generalized across the independent samples. We also showed that CSF concentrations of pTau/amyloid-β moderated the observed predictive relationship, consistent with evidence in rodent models of an underlying trans-synaptic mechanism of pathophysiological spread. The moderating effect of CSF was robust to additional factors, including clinical diagnosis. We then applied our predictive modelling strategy to an exploratory whole-brain voxel-wise analysis to examine the spatial specificity of the NbM→entorhinal model. We found that smaller baseline NbM volumes predicted greater degeneration in localized regions of the entorhinal and perirhinal cortices. By contrast, smaller baseline entorhinal volumes predicted degeneration in the medial temporal cortex, recapitulating a prior influential staging model. Our findings suggest that degeneration of the basal forebrain cholinergic projection system is a robust and reliable upstream event of entorhinal and neocortical degeneration, calling into question a prevailing view of Alzheimer’s disease pathogenesis.

Funder

Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative

National Institutes of Health

Department of Defense

National Institute on Aging

National Institute of Biomedical Imaging and Bioengineering

NIA

Canada First Research Excellence Fund

Doctoral College “Imaging the Mind”

Austrian Science Fund

Pfizer Scientific Services Evaluation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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