Association of Enlarged Perivascular Spaces With Amyloid Burden and Cognitive Decline in Alzheimer Disease Continuum
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Abstract
Background and Objectives To investigate the effects of enlarged perivascular space (EPVS) on amyloid burden and cognitive function in Alzheimer disease (AD) continuum.
Methods We retrospectively reviewed 208 patients with AD across the cognitive continuum (preclinical, prodromal, and AD dementia) who showed amyloid deposition on 18F-florbetaben PET scans and 82 healthy controls. EPVSs were counted for each patient in the basal ganglia (BG), centrum semiovale (CSO), and hippocampus (HP) on axial T2-weighted images. Patients were then classified according to the number of EPVSs into the EPVS+ (>10 EPVSs) and EPVS– (0–10 EPVSs) groups for the BG and CSO, respectively. In terms of HP-EPVS, equal or more than 7 EPVSs on bilateral hemisphere were regarded as the presence of HP-EPVS. After adjusting for markers of small vessel disease (SVD), multiple linear regression analyses were performed to determine the intergroup differences in global and regional amyloid deposition and cognitive function at the time of diagnosis of AD continuum. A linear mixed model was used to assess the effects of EPVSs on the longitudinal changes in the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) scores.
Results Amyloid burden at the time of diagnosis of AD continuum was not associated with the degree of BG-, CSO-, or HP-EPVS. BG-EPVS affected language and frontal/executive function via SVD markers, and HP-EPVS was associated with general cognition via SVD markers. However, CSO-EPVS was not associated with baseline cognition. A higher number of CSO-EPVS was significantly associated with a more rapid decline in MMSE scores (β = −0.58, standard error = 0.23, p = 0.011) independent of the amyloid burden. In terms of BG and HP, there was no difference between the EPVS+ and EPVS– groups in the rate of longitudinal decreases in MMSE scores.
Discussion Our findings suggest that BG-, CSO-, and HP-EPVS are not associated with baseline β-amyloid burden or cognitive function independently of SVD at the diagnosis of AD continuum. However, CSO-EPVS appears to be associated with the progression of cognitive decline in an amyloid-independent manner. Further studies are needed to investigate whether CSO-EPVS is a potential therapeutic target in patients with AD continuum.
Glossary
- AD=
- Alzheimer disease;
- ADL=
- activities of daily living;
- ANCOVA=
- analysis of covariance;
- BAPL=
- brain amyloid plaque load;
- BG=
- basal ganglia;
- CDR-SOB=
- Clinical Dementia Rating–Sum of Boxes;
- CMB=
- cerebral microbleed;
- CSO=
- centrum semiovale;
- EPVS=
- enlarged perivascular space;
- FBB=
- florbetaben;
- FDR=
- false discovery rate;
- FLAIR=
- fluid-attenuated inversion recovery;
- HP=
- hippocampus;
- ICC=
- intraclass correlation coefficient;
- MMSE=
- Mini-Mental Status Examination;
- MTA=
- medial temporal lobe atrophy;
- RCFT=
- Rey-Osterrieth Complex Figure Test;
- SE=
- standard error;
- SUVR=
- standardized uptake value ratio;
- SVD=
- small vessel disease;
- TR=
- repetition time;
- WMH=
- white matter hyperintensity
Footnotes
Go to Neurology.org/N for full disclosures. Funding information and disclosures deemed relevant by the authors, if any, are provided at the end of the article.
↵* These authors contributed equally to this work as co–first authors.
↵** These authors contributed equally to this work as co–senior authors.
Submitted and externally peer reviewed. The handling editors were Brad Worrall, MD, MSc, FAAN, and Rawan Tarawneh, MD.
- Received October 4, 2021.
- Accepted in final form June 3, 2022.
- © 2022 American Academy of Neurology
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