Abstract

AbstractBackgroundEarly‐onset Alzheimer’s disease (EOAD) differentiates from late‐onset AD by a predominant and early involvement of the parietal neocortex with hippocampal sparing, leading to non‐amnesic cognitive syndromes (deficits in working memory, visuospatial abilities, praxis, or language). The diagnosis of a neurodegenerative disease is often not the first mentioned in such young patients. We aimed to identify the inaugural symptoms and diagnosis in working age EOAD patients.MethodsWe retrospectively reviewed the files of patients younger than 62 years referred to our memory clinic for cognitive dysfunction during the last year. Among 91 patients, 31 were diagnosed with AD based on clinical and biological criteria (cerebrospinal fluid biomarkers). Their mean age was 55±3.8 years.ResultsEleven EOAD patients (35%) were initially diagnosed with an occupational burnout syndrome, while logopenic aphasia or visuo‐spatial deficit were observed in the remaining 20 patients (65%). In the burnout syndrome subgroup, the delay between the first symptoms and neurological examination was 2.6±1.1 years. The initial Mini‐Mental State Examination score was 19.6±4.6/30. Neuropsychological assessment showed a severe working memory deficit, associated with mild cognitive cortical parietal syndrome. Visual inspection of brain MRI and FDG‐PET showed bilateral parietal atrophy and a severe focal hypometabolism of associative parietal cortices. No patient had family history of EAOD and the molecular genetic testing of AD mutation was negative.ConclusionWe describe, for the first time, a new clinical presentation of EOAD mimicking an occupational burnout syndrome. The severe inaugural working memory deficit due to the early cortical parietal damage leads to an inability to carry out concurrent professional tasks, a reduction of professional efficacy and a severe anxiety, in the absence of overt aphasia or episodic memory deficit at the time of initial evaluation. The patient stops working and is often referred to psychiatrists, the diagnosis being delayed until the cognitive deficit worsens, and strongly affects the autonomy at a more advanced stage of the disease. It is crucial to consider this clinical phenotype in the definition of EOAD to avoid delayed diagnosis.

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