Abstract

Background and Purpose: Olfactory dysfunction is one of the most common non-motor symptoms in Parkinson's disease (PD) preceding the motor symptoms for years. This study aimed to evaluate different olfactory domains in PD patients in comparison with healthy controls and to explore the relationships among olfactory deficit and other clinical manifestations in patients with PD.Methods: Sniffin' Sticks test, which detects olfactory threshold, discrimination, and identification (TDI), were conducted in 500 PD patients and 115 controls. Furthermore, demographic and clinical data including motor and other non-motor symptoms were collected.Results: In the single olfactory model, the identification test showed the area under the receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curve (AUC = 0.818), followed by threshold test (AUC = 0.731) and discrimination test (AUC = 0.723). Specifically, the identification test has a similar discriminative power as the TDI score (0.818 and 0.828, respectively, p = 0.481). In the integrated olfactory model involved with other non-motor manifestations, identification test scores performed as good as the TDI score in differentiating PD patients from controls (0.916 and 0.918, respectively, p = 0.797). In PD patients, age and cognition together explained 7.5% of the variance of the threshold score, while age, cognition, and gender accounted for the 15.2% explained variance of the discrimination score, while cognition, age, the ability of daily living, and gender together interpreted 11.1% of the variance of the identification score.Conclusion: Our results indicated that the identification domain was the most practical olfactory factor in differentiating PD patients, and the combination of several different manifestations was better than a single symptom. Furthermore, the olfactory identification score may be associated with the ability of daily living.

Highlights

  • The olfactory deficit is one of the most important non-motor symptoms that could appear to precede motor symptoms in Parkinson’s disease (PD) [1,2,3,4]

  • In terms of differentiating PD from control subjects, some studies have shown that the sensitivity and specificity of olfactory testing are better than other biomarkers, including singlephoton emission computed tomography (SPECT) and positronemission tomography (PET) imaging of the dopamine (DA) transporter [12]

  • Mahlknecht and colleagues investigated the power of olfactory function in distinguishing PD with a proper sample size, but the olfactory test was limited to the identification domain [16]

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Summary

Introduction

The olfactory deficit is one of the most important non-motor symptoms that could appear to precede motor symptoms in Parkinson’s disease (PD) [1,2,3,4]. Mahlknecht and colleagues investigated the power of olfactory function in distinguishing PD with a proper sample size, but the olfactory test was limited to the identification domain [16]. Krismer and colleagues researched different olfactory domains, but the sample size is relatively small [17]. Olfactory dysfunction is one of the most common non-motor symptoms in Parkinson’s disease (PD) preceding the motor symptoms for years.

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