A1 Refereed original research article in a scientific journal

Difference in Amyloid Load Between Single Memory Domain and Multidomain Subjective Cognitive Decline: A Study from the SILCODE




AuthorsWang Xiaoqi, Bi Qiuhui, Lu Jie, Chan Piu, Hu Xiaochen, Su Li, Jessen Frank, Lin Hua, Han Chunlei, Shu Ni, Liu Hesheng, Han Ying

PublisherIOS Press

Publication year2022

JournalJournal of Alzheimer's Disease

Journal name in sourceJournal of Alzheimer's disease : JAD

Journal acronymJ Alzheimers Dis

Volume85

Issue4

First page 1573

Last page1582

ISSN1387-2877

eISSN1875-8908

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.3233/JAD-215373


Abstract

Background: Subjective cognitive decline (SCD), an at-risk condition of Alzheimer's disease (AD), can involve various cognitive domains, such as memory, language, planning, and attention.

Objective: We aims to explore the differences in amyloid load between the single memory domain SCD (sd-SCD) and the multidomain SCD (md-SCD) and assess the relationship of amyloid pathology with quantitative SCD scores and objective cognition.

Methods: A total of 63 SCD participants from the SILCODE study underwent the clinical evaluation, neuropsychological assessment, and 18F-florbetapir PET scan. Global amyloid standard uptake value ratio (SUVr) was calculated. Additionally, regional amyloid SUVr was quantified in 12 brain regions of interests. A nonparametric rank ANCOVA was used to compare the global and regional amyloid SUVr between the md-SCD (n = 34) and sd-SCD (n = 29) groups. A multiple linear regression analysis was conducted to test the relationship of amyloid SUVr with quantitative SCD scores and objective cognition.

Results: Compared with individuals with sd-SCD, individuals with md-SCD had increased global amyloid SUVr (F = 5.033, p = 0.029) and regional amyloid SUVr in the left middle temporal gyrus (F = 12.309, p = 0.001; Bonferroni corrected), after controlling for the effects of age, sex, and education. When pooling all SCD participants together, the increased global amyloid SUVr was related with higher SCD-plus sum scores and lower Auditory Verbal Learning Test-delayed recall scores.

Conclusion: According to our findings, individuals with md-SCD showed higher amyloid accumulation than individuals with sd-SCD, suggesting that md-SCD may experience a more advanced stage of SCD. Additionally, increased global amyloid load was predictive of a poorer episodic memory function in SCD individuals.



Last updated on 2024-26-11 at 22:14