학술논문

Can MRI Visual Assessment Differentiate the Variants of Primary-Progressive Aphasia?
Document Type
article
Source
American Journal of Neuroradiology. 38(5)
Subject
Biomedical and Clinical Sciences
Chemical Sciences
Physical Chemistry
Clinical Sciences
Neurosciences
Aging
Acquired Cognitive Impairment
Biomedical Imaging
Aphasia
Brain Disorders
Dementia
Clinical Research
Detection
screening and diagnosis
4.2 Evaluation of markers and technologies
Aged
Aphasia
Primary Progressive
Brain
Cohort Studies
Female
Humans
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Male
Middle Aged
Neuroimaging
Sensitivity and Specificity
Nuclear Medicine & Medical Imaging
Clinical sciences
Physical chemistry
Language
Abstract
Background and purposePrimary-progressive aphasia is a clinically and pathologically heterogeneous condition. Nonfluent, semantic, and logopenic are the currently recognized clinical variants. The recommendations for the classification of primary-progressive aphasia have advocated variant-specific patterns of atrophy. The aims of the present study were to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of the proposed imaging criteria and to assess the intra- and interrater reporting agreements.Materials and methodsThe cohort comprised 51 patients with a root diagnosis of primary-progressive aphasia, 25 patients with typical Alzheimer disease, and 26 matched control participants. Group-level analysis (voxel-based morphometry) confirmed the proposed atrophy patterns for the 3 syndromes. The individual T1-weighted anatomic images were reported by 3 senior neuroradiologists.ResultsWe observed a dichotomized pattern of high sensitivity (92%) and specificity (93%) for the proposed atrophy pattern of semantic-variant primary-progressive aphasia and low sensitivity (21% for nonfluent-variant primary-progressive aphasia and 43% for logopenic-variant primary-progressive aphasia) but high specificity (91% for nonfluent-variant primary-progressive aphasia and 95% for logopenic-variant primary-progressive aphasia) in other primary-progressive aphasia variants and Alzheimer disease (sensitivity 43%, specificity 92%). MR imaging was least sensitive for the diagnosis of nonfluent-variant primary-progressive aphasia. Intrarater agreement analysis showed mean κ values above the widely accepted threshold of 0.6 (mean, 0.63 ± 0.16). Pair-wise interobserver agreement outcomes, however, were well below this threshold in 5 of the 6 possible interrater contrasts (mean, 0.41 ± 0.09).ConclusionsWhile the group-level results were in precise agreement with the recommendations, semantic-variant primary-progressive aphasia was the only subtype for which the proposed recommendations were both sensitive and specific at an individual level.