1. An Alzheimer's Disease-Derived Biomarker Signature Identifies Parkinson's Disease Patients with Dementia
- Author
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Howard I. Hurtig, Christos Davatzikos, Ian A. Mellis, Alice Chen-Plotkin, Jacqueline Rick, John Q. Trojanowski, Jimit Doshi, Sharon X. Xie, Daniel Weintraub, Leslie M. Shaw, Yosef Berlyand, and Jennifer D. McBride
- Subjects
Male ,0301 basic medicine ,Oncology ,Apolipoprotein E ,Pervasive Developmental Disorders ,Pathology ,Parkinson's disease ,Physiology ,Social Sciences ,lcsh:Medicine ,Disease ,Biochemistry ,Nervous System ,Cohort Studies ,Correlation ,Cognition ,Learning and Memory ,0302 clinical medicine ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Cluster Analysis ,Phosphorylation ,lcsh:Science ,Cerebrospinal Fluid ,Cognitive Impairment ,Movement Disorders ,Multidisciplinary ,Cognitive Neurology ,Neurodegenerative Diseases ,Parkinson Disease ,Middle Aged ,Body Fluids ,Neurology ,Biomarker (medicine) ,Female ,Anatomy ,Alzheimer's disease ,Research Article ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Genotype ,Cognitive Neuroscience ,tau Proteins ,03 medical and health sciences ,Apolipoproteins E ,Alzheimer Disease ,Memory ,Internal medicine ,Mental Health and Psychiatry ,medicine ,Humans ,Dementia ,Aged ,Amyloid beta-Peptides ,business.industry ,lcsh:R ,Biology and Life Sciences ,medicine.disease ,Peptide Fragments ,Cross-Sectional Studies ,Logistic Models ,030104 developmental biology ,Developmental Psychology ,Cognitive Science ,lcsh:Q ,business ,Biomarkers ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Neuroscience - Abstract
Biomarkers from multiple modalities have been shown to correlate with cognition in Parkinson's disease (PD) and in Alzheimer's disease (AD). However, the relationships of these markers with each other, and the use of multiple markers in concert to predict an outcome of interest, are areas that are much less explored. Our objectives in this study were (1) to evaluate relationships among 17 biomarkers previously reported to associate with cognition in PD or AD and (2) to test performance of a five-biomarker classifier trained to recognize AD in identifying PD with dementia (PDD). To do this, we evaluated a cross-sectional cohort of PD patients (n = 75) across a spectrum of cognitive abilities. All PD participants had 17 baseline biomarkers from clinical, genetic, biochemical, and imaging modalities measured, and correlations among biomarkers were assessed by Spearman's rho and by hierarchical clustering. We found that internal correlation among all 17 candidate biomarkers was modest, showing a maximum pairwise correlation coefficient of 0.51. However, a five-marker subset panel derived from AD (CSF total tau, CSF phosphorylated tau, CSF amyloid beta 42, APOE genotype, and SPARE-AD imaging score) discriminated cognitively normal PD patients vs. PDD patients with 80% accuracy, when employed in a classifier originally trained to recognize AD. Thus, an AD-derived biomarker signature may identify PDD patients with moderately high accuracy, suggesting mechanisms shared with AD in some PDD patients. Based on five measures readily obtained during life, this AD-derived signature may prove useful in identifying PDD patients most likely to respond to AD-based crossover therapies.
- Published
- 2016