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Prevalence Estimates of Amyloid Abnormality Across the Alzheimer Disease Clinical Spectrum

Authors :
Jansen, Willemijn J
Janssen, Olin
von Arnim, Christine
Marquié, Marta
Martinez-Lage, Pablo
Maserejian, Nancy
Mattsson, Niklas
de Mendonça, Alexandre
Meyer, Philipp T
Miller, Bruce L
Minatani, Shinobu
Mintun, Mark A
Mok, Vincent C T
Baiardi, Simone
Molinuevo, Jose Luis
Morbelli, Silvia Daniela
Morris, John C
Mroczko, Barbara
Na, Duk L
Newberg, Andrew
Nobili, Flavio
Nordberg, Agneta
Olde Rikkert, Marcel G M
de Oliveira, Catarina Resende
Baldeiras, Ines
Olivieri, Pauline
Orellana, Adela
Paraskevas, George
Parchi, Piero
Pardini, Matteo
Parnetti, Lucilla
Peters, Oliver
Poirier, Judes
Popp, Julius
Prabhakar, Sudesh
Barthel, Henryk
Rabinovici, Gil D
Ramakers, Inez H
Rami, Lorena
Reiman, Eric M
Rinne, Juha O
Rodrigue, Karen M
Rodríguez-Rodriguez, Eloy
Roe, Catherine M
Rosa-Neto, Pedro
Rosen, Howard J
Bateman, Randall J
Rot, Uros
Rowe, Christopher C
Rüther, Eckart
Ruiz, Agustín
Sabri, Osama
Sakhardande, Jayant
Sánchez-Juan, Pascual
Sando, Sigrid Botne
Santana, Isabel
Sarazin, Marie
Van Berckel, Bart
Scheltens, Philip
Schröder, Johannes
Selnes, Per
Seo, Sang Won
Silva, Dina
Skoog, Ingmar
Snyder, Peter J
Soininen, Hilkka
Sollberger, Marc
Sperling, Reisa A
Binette, Alexa Pichet
Spiru, Luisa
Stern, Yaakov
Stomrud, Erik
Takeda, Akitoshi
Teichmann, Marc
Teunissen, Charlotte E
Thompson, Louisa I
Tomassen, Jori
Tsolaki, Magda
Vandenberghe, Rik
Blennow, Kaj
Verbeek, Marcel M
Verhey, Frans R J
Villemagne, Victor
Villeneuve, Sylvia
Vogelgsang, Jonathan
Waldemar, Gunhild
Wallin, Anders
Wallin, Åsa K
Wiltfang, Jens
Wolk, David A
Boada, Merce
Yen, Tzu-Chen
Zboch, Marzena
Zetterberg, Henrik
Boecker, Henning
Tijms, Betty M
Bottlaender, Michel
den Braber, Anouk
Brooks, David J
Van Buchem, Mark A
Camus, Vincent
Carill, Jose Manuel
Cerman, Jiri
Chen, Kewei
Chételat, Gaël
Chipi, Elena
Vos, Stephanie J B
Cohen, Ann D
Daniels, Alisha
Delarue, Marion
Didic, Mira
Drzezga, Alexander
Dubois, Bruno
Eckerström, Marie
Ekblad, Laura L
Engelborghs, Sebastiaan
Epelbaum, Stéphane
Ossenkoppele, Rik
Fagan, Anne M
Fan, Yong
Fladby, Tormod
Fleisher, Adam S
Van der Flier, Wiesje M
Förster, Stefan
Fortea, Juan
Frederiksen, Kristian Steen
Freund-Levi, Yvonne
Frings, Lars
Visser, Pieter Jelle
Frisoni, Giovanni B
Fröhlich, Lutz
Gabryelewicz, Tomasz
Gertz, Hermann-Josef
Gill, Kiran Dip
Gkatzima, Olymbia
Gómez-Tortosa, Estrella
Grimmer, Timo
Guedj, Eric
Habeck, Christian G
Group, Amyloid Biomarker Study
Hampel, Harald
Handels, Ron
Hansson, Oskar
Hausner, Lucrezia
Hellwig, Sabine
Heneka, Michael
Herukka, Sanna-Kaisa
Hildebrandt, Helmut
Hodges, John
Hort, Jakub
Aarsland, Dag
Huang, Chin-Chang
Iriondo, Ane Juaristi
Itoh, Yoshiaki
Ivanoiu, Adrian
Jagust, William J
Jessen, Frank
Johannsen, Peter
Johnson, Keith A
Kandimalla, Ramesh
Kapaki, Elisabeth N
Alcolea, Daniel
Kern, Silke
Kilander, Lena
Klimkowicz-Mrowiec, Aleksandra
Klunk, William E
Koglin, Norman
Kornhuber, Johannes
Kramberger, Milica G
Kuo, Hung-Chou
Van Laere, Koen
Landau, Susan M
Altomare, Daniele
Landeau, Brigitte
Lee, Dong Young
de Leon, Mony
Leyton, Cristian E
Lin, Kun-Ju
Lleó, Alberto
Löwenmark, Malin
Madsen, Karine
Maier, Wolfgang
Marcusson, Jan
Clinical sciences
Neuroprotection & Neuromodulation
Neurology
Amsterdam Neuroscience - Brain Imaging
Amsterdam Neuroscience - Neurodegeneration
Radiology and nuclear medicine
Laboratory Medicine
Amsterdam Neuroscience - Neuroinfection & -inflammation
APH - Personalized Medicine
APH - Methodology
RS: MHeNs - R1 - Cognitive Neuropsychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience
Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie
Source :
JAMA Neurol, Jama Neurology, 79, 3, pp. 228-243, Jama Neurology, 79, 228-243, Amyloid Biomarker Study Group 2022, ' Prevalence Estimates of Amyloid Abnormality Across the Alzheimer Disease Clinical Spectrum ', JAMA Neurology, vol. 79, no. 3, pp. 228-243 . https://doi.org/10.1001/jamaneurol.2021.5216, JAMA Neurology, 79(3), 228-243. American Medical Association, JAMA neurology 79(3), 228-243 (2022). doi:10.1001/jamaneurol.2021.5216, Jansen, W J, Janssen, O, Tijms, B M, Vos, S J B, Ossenkoppele, R, Visser, P J & Amyloid Biomarker Study Group 2022, ' Prevalence Estimates of Amyloid Abnormality Across the Alzheimer Disease Clinical Spectrum ', JAMA Neurology, vol. 79, no. 3, pp. 228-243 . https://doi.org/10.1001/jamaneurol.2021.5216
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Importance: One characteristic histopathological event in Alzheimer disease (AD) is cerebral amyloid aggregation, which can be detected by biomarkers in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and on positron emission tomography (PET) scans. Prevalence estimates of amyloid pathology are important for health care planning and clinical trial design.Objective: To estimate the prevalence of amyloid abnormality in persons with normal cognition, subjective cognitive decline, mild cognitive impairment, or clinical AD dementia and to examine the potential implications of cutoff methods, biomarker modality (CSF or PET), age, sex, APOE genotype, educational level, geographical region, and dementia severity for these estimates.Design, Setting, and Participants: This cross-sectional, individual-participant pooled study included participants from 85 Amyloid Biomarker Study cohorts. Data collection was performed from January 1, 2013, to December 31, 2020. Participants had normal cognition, subjective cognitive decline, mild cognitive impairment, or clinical AD dementia. Normal cognition and subjective cognitive decline were defined by normal scores on cognitive tests, with the presence of cognitive complaints defining subjective cognitive decline. Mild cognitive impairment and clinical AD dementia were diagnosed according to published criteria.Exposures: Alzheimer disease biomarkers detected on PET or in CSF.Main Outcomes and Measures: Amyloid measurements were dichotomized as normal or abnormal using cohort-provided cutoffs for CSF or PET or by visual reading for PET. Adjusted data-driven cutoffs for abnormal amyloid were calculated using gaussian mixture modeling. Prevalence of amyloid abnormality was estimated according to age, sex, cognitive status, biomarker modality, APOE carrier status, educational level, geographical location, and dementia severity using generalized estimating equations.Results: Among the 19 097 participants (mean [SD] age, 69.1 [9.8] years; 10 148 women [53.1%]) included, 10 139 (53.1%) underwent an amyloid PET scan and 8958 (46.9%) had an amyloid CSF measurement. Using cohort-provided cutoffs, amyloid abnormality prevalences were similar to 2015 estimates for individuals without dementia and were similar across PET- and CSF-based estimates (24%; 95% CI, 21%-28%) in participants with normal cognition, 27% (95% CI, 21%-33%) in participants with subjective cognitive decline, and 51% (95% CI, 46%-56%) in participants with mild cognitive impairment, whereas for clinical AD dementia the estimates were higher for PET than CSF (87% vs 79%; mean difference, 8%; 95% CI, 0%-16%; P = .04). Gaussian mixture modeling-based cutoffs for amyloid measures on PET scans were similar to cohort-provided cutoffs and were not adjusted. Adjusted CSF cutoffs resulted in a 10% higher amyloid abnormality prevalence than PET-based estimates in persons with normal cognition (mean difference, 9%; 95% CI, 3%-15%; P = .004), subjective cognitive decline (9%; 95% CI, 3%-15%; P = .005), and mild cognitive impairment (10%; 95% CI, 3%-17%; P = .004), whereas the estimates were comparable in persons with clinical AD dementia (mean difference, 4%; 95% CI, -2% to 9%; P = .18).Conclusions and Relevance: This study found that CSF-based estimates using adjusted data-driven cutoffs were up to 10% higher than PET-based estimates in people without dementia, whereas the results were similar among people with dementia. This finding suggests that preclinical and prodromal AD may be more prevalent than previously estimated, which has important implications for clinical trial recruitment strategies and health care planning policies.

Details

ISSN :
21686157 and 21686149
Volume :
79
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
JAMA neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6e2729bd4536737f67e3bdc3a54c881b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1001/jamaneurol.2021.5216