Abstract

Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) is reported at high prevalence in selected autopsy case series of former contact sports athletes. Nevertheless, the contribution of CTE pathology to clinical presentation and its interaction with co-morbid neurodegenerative pathologies remain unclear. To address these issues, we performed comprehensive neuropathology assessments on the brains of former athletes with dementia and considered these findings together with detailed clinical histories to derive an integrated clinicopathological diagnosis for each case. Consecutive, autopsy-acquired brains from former soccer and rugby players with dementia were assessed for neurodegenerative pathologies using established and preliminary consensus protocols. Thereafter, next of kin interviews were conducted to obtain detailed accounts of the patient’s clinical presentation and course of disease to inform a final, integrated clinicopathological diagnosis. Neuropathologic change consistent with CTE (CTE-NC) was confirmed in five of seven former soccer and three of four former rugby players’ brains, invariably in combination with mixed, often multiple neurodegenerative pathologies. However, in just three cases was the integrated dementia diagnosis consistent with CTE, the remainder having alternate diagnoses, with the most frequent integrated diagnosis Alzheimer’s disease (AD) (four cases; one as mixed AD and vascular dementia). This consecutive autopsy series identifies neuropathologic change consistent with preliminary diagnostic criteria for CTE (CTE-NC) in a high proportion of former soccer and rugby players dying with dementia. However, in the majority, CTE-NC appears as a co-morbidity rather than the primary, dementia causing pathology. As such, we suggest that while CTE-NC might be common in former athletes with dementia, in many cases its clinical significance remains uncertain.

Highlights

  • There is growing concern over the association between exposure to traumatic brain injury (TBI) and increased risk of a variety of neuropsychiatric and neurocognitive outcomes, in particular those linked to a specific neurodegenerative pathology known as chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) [11, 29, 31, 42, 50]

  • Our observations suggest that CTE neuropathologic change (CTE-NC) is present in a high proportion of former soccer and rugby players with dementia

  • Multiple, mixed neurodegenerative pathologies were typical in these former soccer and rugby players with dementia

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Summary

Introduction

There is growing concern over the association between exposure to traumatic brain injury (TBI) and increased risk of a variety of neuropsychiatric and neurocognitive outcomes, in particular those linked to a specific neurodegenerative pathology known as chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) [11, 29, 31, 42, 50]. First recognized in the early part of the twentieth century as the punch drunk syndrome of boxers [24], it was not until descriptions of CTE in autopsy studies of non-boxer athletes that the lifelong consequences of exposure to TBI attracted widespread attention [27, 36]. Despite this increased attention, there remain comparatively few accounts of the neuropathology of late survival from TBI [43]. Isolated studies in nonboxer individuals exposed to repetitive TBI were reported [6, 12], to the end of the twentieth century accounts of DP largely were restricted to observations in former boxers

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