Abstract

Sporadic cerebral small vessel disease is an important cause of vascular dementia, a syndrome of cognitive impairment together with vascular brain damage. At post-mortem pure vascular dementia is rare, with evidence of co-existing Alzheimer's disease pathology in 95% of cases. This work used MRI to characterize structural abnormalities during the preclinical phase of vascular dementia in symptomatic small vessel disease.121 subjects were recruited into the St George's Cognition and Neuroimaging in Stroke study and followed up longitudinally for five years. Over this period 22 individuals converted to dementia. Using voxel-based morphometry, we found structural abnormalities present at baseline in those with preclinical dementia, with reduced grey matter density in the left striatum and hippocampus, and more white matter hyperintensities in the frontal white-matter. The lacunar data revealed that some of these abnormalities may be due to lesions within the striatum and centrum semiovale.Using support vector machines, future dementia could be best predicted using hippocampal and striatal Jacobian determinant data, achieving a balanced classification accuracy of 73%. Using cluster ward linkage we identified four anatomical subtypes. Successful predictions were restricted to groups with lower levels of vascular damage. The subgroup that could not be predicted were younger, further from conversion, had the highest levels of vascular damage, with milder cognitive impairment at baseline but more rapid deterioration in processing speed and executive function, consistent with a primary vascular dementia. In contrast, the remaining groups had decreasing levels of vascular damage and increasing memory impairment consistent with progressively more Alzheimer's-like pathology. Voxel-wise rates of hippocampal atrophy supported these distinctions, with the vascular group closely resembling the non-dementing cohort, whereas the Alzheimer's like group demonstrated global hippocampal atrophy.This work reveals distinct anatomical endophenotypes in preclinical vascular dementia, forming a spectrum between vascular and Alzheimer's like pathology. The latter group can be identified using baseline MRI, with 73% converting within 5 years. It was not possible to predict the vascular dominant dementia subgroup, however 19% of negative predictions with high levels of vascular disease would ultimately develop dementia. It may be that techniques more sensitive to white matter damage, such as diffusion weighted imaging, may prove more useful for this vascular dominant subgroup in the future.This work provides a way to accurately stratify patients using a baseline MRI scan, and has utility in future clinical trials designed to slow or prevent the onset of dementia in these high-risk cohorts.

Highlights

  • It is generally accepted that future treatments for dementia should aim to start prior to symptom onset, when extensive pathology will already be present and difficult to reverse (Langbaum et al, 2013)

  • The most common cause is cerebral small vessel disease (SVD), a highly prevalent, agerelated condition affecting the small vessels of the brain (De Leeuw et al, 2001; Pantoni, 2010) that is associated with characteristic changes on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) including white matter hyperintensities (WMH), lacunar infarcts, cerebral microbleeds, and brain atrophy (Gouw et al, 2011)

  • This work examines, in a cohort followed for 5 years, the structural correlates of preclinical vascular dementia using MRI to predict the development of future dementia in a cohort of individuals with sporadic “symptomatic small vessel disease”, defined as both clinical and radiological evidence of a lacunar syndrome together with confluent WMH, but without evidence of large cortical infarcts, cerebral amyloid angiopathy or other cause of white matter disease

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Summary

Introduction

It is generally accepted that future treatments for dementia should aim to start prior to symptom onset, when extensive pathology will already be present and difficult to reverse (Langbaum et al, 2013). Vascular cognitive impairment is defined as a syndrome in which at NeuroImage: Clinical 19 (2018) 925–938 least one cognitive domain is impaired, together with evidence of vascular damage (Thal et al, 2012), and becomes vascular dementia once a second cognitive domain becomes affected (Gold et al, 1997) This clinically heterogeneous entity is the second most common cause of dementia after Alzheimer's disease (Jellinger and Attems, 2010), and can manifest due to a broad range of sporadic and familial conditions where the net result is vascular damage to the brain. This work examines, in a cohort followed for 5 years, the structural correlates of preclinical vascular dementia using MRI to predict the development of future dementia in a cohort of individuals with sporadic “symptomatic small vessel disease”, defined as both clinical and radiological evidence of a lacunar syndrome together with confluent WMH (modified Fazekas grade ≥ 2), but without evidence of large cortical infarcts, cerebral amyloid angiopathy or other cause of white matter disease The most common cause is cerebral small vessel disease (SVD), a highly prevalent, agerelated condition affecting the small vessels of the brain (De Leeuw et al, 2001; Pantoni, 2010) that is associated with characteristic changes on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) including white matter hyperintensities (WMH), lacunar infarcts, cerebral microbleeds, and brain atrophy (Gouw et al, 2011).

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