OBJECTIVES/GOALS: To identify empiric neuropsychiatric symptom (NPS) clusters in behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia and to determine the role of early anxiety/depression on functional progression. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Analyses were conducted using data from the ARTFL-LEFFTDS Longitudinal Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration (ALLFTD) study, an established consortium with an ongoing cohort study of FTD patients across 18 clinical sites which includes comprehensive cognitive, neuropsychiatric, and structural neuroimaging data. A polychoric cluster analysis was performed on subjects from the ALLFTD cohort [applewebdata%3A//044E463E-34DA-4677-9EDC-B8309D14C337#_msocom_1] with early-stage disease (N=145, male 61%, median age 62 years) in order to identify empiric NPS clusters. Cox proportional hazard regression was then used to examine the association between early affective symptoms in bvFTD and subsequent functional disabilities adjusted for age, sex, level of education, and FTLD CDR global score. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: We identified a four-factor model as the best fit for the data: (1) an affective cluster with prominent depression, anxiety, agitation, and irritability, (2) a disinhibited symptom cluster with prominent elation and disinhibition, (3) an obsessive symptom cluster with prominent obsessive/ritualistic behavior and hyperorality, and (4) a psychotic symptom cluster with prominent delusions and hallucinations. The hazard of developing impairments in transactions, language, self-care, meal preparation, and incontinence was significantly elevated in those with early affective symptoms (depression/anxiety). DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE: In this study we show that, NPS cluster into four discrete groups: (1) affective symptoms, (2) disinhibited symptoms, (3) obsessive symptoms, and (4) psychotic symptoms. Anxiety and depression are prominent within the affective symptom cluster and are associated with accelerated functional decline in a number of domains.