AbstractBackgroundWhite matter changes are hypothesized to be among the earliest changes occurring in the course of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). We investigated associations between AD pathology, namely amyloid and tau, and white matter microstructural changes in cognitively unimpaired individuals at risk of AD dementia. We expected higher levels of pathology to be related to lower free‐water‐corrected fractional anisotropy.MethodWe studied 223 cognitively normal older adults with PET and multi‐shell diffusion MRI from the PREVENT‐AD cohort. We first measured standardized uptake value ratios (SUVRs) in 40 brain regions for amyloid‐ß (Aß, i.e., lateral and medial prefrontal, parietal, lateral temporal, and cingulate cortical regions in both hemispheres) and 26 brain regions for tau (i.e., Braak stages I, III, and IV). We then used TractSeg, a deep learning framework, to segment 49 well‐established white matter bundles. We mapped free‐water‐corrected fractional anisotropy (FAT) in those bundles. Lastly, to explore the relationships between AD pathology and white matter microstructure across bundles, we applied two separate partial least squares analyses: one for Aß pathology and one for tau (Figure 1).ResultWe found one significant latent variable relating Aß pathology to FAT. Specifically, higher levels of Aß pathology were associated with the combination of higher levels of FAT within the rostral body of the uncinate fascicle and superior longitudinal fascicle (Figure 2A). We found two significant latent variables relating tau pathology to FAT for which higher levels of tau pathology were associated with elevated FAT within the uncinate fascicle, thalamo‐occipital bundle, optic radiation, inferior occipitofrontal fascicle, inferior longitudinal fascicle, middle longitudinal fascicle, etc. (Figure 2B).ConclusionIn cognitively unimpaired individuals at risk of AD, increased Aß and tau pathology were associated with higher levels of FAT in AD‐related bundles. These unexpected findings may suggest an inverted U‐shape pattern between AD pathology and FAT in the preclinical phase of AD for which FAT values would start by increasing before decreasing later in the course of the disease. This first increase might be a marker of early pathological processes such as neuroinflammation or swelling.
Read full abstract