4.6 Article

Faster cognitive decline in dementia due to Alzheimer disease with clinically undiagnosed Lewy body disease

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PLOS ONE
卷 14, 期 6, 页码 -

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PUBLIC LIBRARY SCIENCE
DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0217566

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资金

  1. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke [U24 NS072026]
  2. National Institute on Aging [P30 AG19610]
  3. Arizona Department of Health Services [211002]
  4. Arizona Biomedical Research Commission [4001, 0011, 05-901, 1001]
  5. Michael J. Fox Foundation for Parkinson's Research
  6. Shanghai Green Valley Pharmaceutical

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Background Neuropathology has demonstrated a high rate of comorbid pathology in dementia due to Alzheimer's disease (ADD). The most common major comorbidity is Lewy body disease (LBD), either as dementia with Lewy bodies (AD-DLB) or Alzheimer's disease with Lewy bodies (AD-LB), the latter representing subjects with ADD and LBD not meeting neuropathological distribution and density thresholds for DLB. Although it has been established that ADD subjects with undifferentiated LBD have a more rapid cognitive decline than those with ADD alone, it is still unknown whether AD-LB subjects, who represent the majority of LBD and approximately one-third of all those with ADD, have a different clinical course. Methods Subjects with dementia included those with pure ADD (n = 137), AD-DLB (n = 64) and ADLB (n = 114), all with two or more complete Mini Mental State Examinations (MMSE) and a full neuropathological examination. Results Linear mixed models assessing MMSE change showed that the AD-LB group had significantly greater decline compared to the ADD group (beta = -0.69, 95% CI: -1.05, -0.33, p<0.001) while the AD-DLB group did not (beta = -0.30, 95% CI: -0.73, 0.14, p = 0.18). Of those with AD-DLB and AD-LB, only 66% and 2.1%, respectively, had been diagnosed with LBD at any point during their clinical course. Compared with clinically-diagnosed AD-DLB subjects, those that were clinically undetected had significantly lower prevalences of parkinsonism (p = 0.046), visual hallucinations (p = 0.0008) and dream enactment behavior (0.013). Conclusions The probable cause of LBD clinical detection failure is the lack of a sufficient set of characteristic core clinical features. Core DLB clinical features were not more common in AD-LB as compared to ADD. Clinical identification of ADD with LBD would allow stratified analyses of ADD clinical trials, potentially improving the probability of trial success.

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