Abstract

BackgroundFrontotemporal dementia (FTD) is a heterogeneous neurodegenerative disorder associated with frontal and temporal atrophy. Subcortical involvement has been described as well, with early thalamic atrophy most commonly associated with the C9orf72 expansion. However thalamic involvement has not been comprehensively investigated across the FTD spectrum.MethodsWe investigated thalamic volumes in a sample of 341 FTD patients (age: mean(standard deviation) 64.2(8.5) years; disease duration: 4.6(2.7) years) compared with 99 age-matched controls (age: 61.9(11.4) years). We performed a parcellation of T1 MRIs using an atlas propagation and label fusion approach to extract left and right thalamus volumes, which were corrected for total intracranial volumes. We assessed subgroups stratified by clinical diagnosis (141 behavioural variant FTD (bvFTD), 76 semantic dementia (SD), 103 progressive nonfluent aphasia (PNFA), 7 with associated motor neurone disease (FTD-MND) and 14 primary progressive aphasia not otherwise specified (PPA-NOS), genetic diagnosis (24 with MAPT, 24 with C9orf72, and 15 with GRN mutations), and pathological diagnosis (40 tauopathy, 61 TDP-43opathy, 3 FUSopathy). We assessed the diagnostic accuracy based on thalamic volume.ResultsOverall, FTD patients had smaller thalami than controls (8% difference in volume, p < 0.0005, ANCOVA). Stratifying by genetics, C9orf72 group had the smallest thalami (14% difference from controls, p < 0.0005). However, the thalami were also smaller than controls in the other genetic groups: GRN and MAPT groups showed a difference of 11% and 9% respectively (p < 0.0005). ROC analysis showed a relatively poor ability to separate C9orf72 from MAPT (AUC = 0.651, p = 0.073) and from GRN cases (AUC = 0.644, p = 0.133) using thalamic volume. All clinical subtypes had significantly smaller thalami than controls (p < 0.0005), with the FTD-MND group having the smallest (15%), followed by bvFTD (9%), PNFA (8%), PPA-NOS (7%), and lastly SD (5%). In the pathological groups, the TDP-43opathies had an 11% difference from controls, and tauopathies 9%, while the FUSopathies showed only 2% of difference from controls (p < 0.0005). GRN, PPA-NOS and SD were the subgroups showing the highest asymmetry in volumes.ConclusionsThe thalamus was most affected in C9orf72 genetically, TDP-43opathies pathologically and FTD-MND clinically. However, thalamic atrophy is a common feature across all FTD groups.

Highlights

  • Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is a clinically, pathologically and genetically heterogeneous neurodegenerative disorder, associated with frontal and temporal atrophy

  • We reviewed the UCL Dementia Research Centre FTD MRI database to identify 341 patients with a usable T1-weighted magnetic resonance (MR) scan and with a diagnosis of behavioural variant FTD (Rascovsky et al, 2011), semantic dementia (SD), progressive nonfluent aphasia (PNFA) (Gorno-Tempini et al, 2011), FTD with associated motor neurone disease (FTD-MND), or a primary progressive aphasia not otherwise specified (PPA-NOS) (Harris et al, 2013). 99 cognitively normal subjects, with a similar age to the patients and with a usable T1weighted MRI, were identified as controls

  • Using an automated and robust segmentation method to segment the thalamus in a large cohort of FTD patients, we demonstrated that thalamic volumes were lower than in controls in all clinical, genetic, and pathological FTD groups except those with FUSopathies, and that FTD-MND, C9orf72, and TDP-43 were the subgroups for which the thalamus was affected

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Summary

Introduction

Frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is a clinically, pathologically and genetically heterogeneous neurodegenerative disorder, associated with frontal and temporal atrophy. One study described a thalamic volume loss of 28–37% in FTD (Mann and South, 1993), a more recent study only found significant thalamic atrophy in C9orf cases, and not in sporadic cases with TDP43 pathology (Yang et al, 2017). We assessed subgroups stratified by clinical diagnosis (141 behavioural variant FTD (bvFTD), 76 semantic dementia (SD), 103 progressive nonfluent aphasia (PNFA), 7 with associated motor neurone disease (FTD-MND) and 14 primary progressive aphasia not otherwise specified (PPA-NOS), genetic diagnosis (24 with MAPT, 24 with C9orf, and 15 with GRN mutations), and pathological diagnosis (40 tauopathy, 61 TDP-43opathy, 3 FUSopathy). Thalamic atrophy is a common feature across all FTD groups

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