학술논문

Assessment of executive function declines in presymptomatic and mildly symptomatic familial frontotemporal dementia: NIH-EXAMINER as a potential clinical trial endpoint.
Document Type
article
Author
Staffaroni, Adam MBajorek, LynnCasaletto, Kaitlin BCobigo, YannGoh, Sheng-Yang MWolf, AmyHeuer, Hilary WElahi, Fanny MLjubenkov, Peter ADever, ReillyKornak, JohnAppleby, BrianBove, JessicaBordelon, YvetteBrannelly, PatrickBrushaber, DanielleCaso, ChristinaCoppola, GiovanniDheel, ChristinaDickerson, Bradford CDickinson, SusanDominguez, SophiaDomoto-Reilly, KimikoFaber, KellyFerrall, JessicaFields, Julie AFishman, AnnFong, JamieForoud, TatianaForsberg, Leah KGavrilova, RalitzaGearhart, DebraGhazanfari, BehnazGhoshal, NupurGoldman, JillGraff-Radford, JonathanGraff-Radford, NeillGrant, IanGrossman, MurrayHaley, DanaHsiung, Ging-YuekHuey, Edward DIrwin, David JJones, David TJones, LynneKantarci, KejalKarydas, AnnaKaufer, Daniel IKerwin, Diana RKnopman, David SKraft, RuthKremers, Walter KKukull, Walter ALitvan, IreneLucente, DianeLungu, CodrinMackenzie, Ian RMaldonado, MirandaManoochehri, MasoodMcGinnis, Scott MMcKinley, EmilyMendez, Mario FMiller, Bruce LMultani, NamitaOnyike, ChiadiPadmanabhan, JayaPantelyat, AlexPearlman, RodneyPetrucelli, LenPotter, MadelineRademakers, RosaRamos, Eliana MarisaRankin, Katherine PRascovsky, KatyaRoberson, Erik DRogalski, EmilySengdy, PhethShaw, Leslie MSyrjanen, JeremyTartaglia, M CarmelaTatton, NadineTaylor, JoanneToga, ArthurTrojanowski, John QWeintraub, SandraWang, PingWong, BonnieWszolek, ZbigniewBoxer, Adam LBoeve, Brad FKramer, Joel HRosen, Howard JARTFL/LEFFTDS consortium
Source
Alzheimer's & dementia : the journal of the Alzheimer's Association. 16(1)
Subject
ARTFL/LEFFTDS consortium
Humans
Disease Progression
Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Longitudinal Studies
Neuropsychological Tests
Mutation
Middle Aged
Female
Male
Executive Function
Frontotemporal Dementia
Biomarkers
C9orf72 Protein
Behavioral variant
Cognition
Corticobasal syndrome
Fluency
Genetic
Inhibition
Neuropsychology
Nonfluent variant
Primary progressive aphasia
Progranulin
Progressive supranuclear palsy
Semantic variant
Set-shifting
Tau
Working memory
Clinical Sciences
Neurosciences
Geriatrics
Language
Abstract
IntroductionIdentifying clinical measures that track disease in the earliest stages of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD) is important for clinical trials. Familial FTLD provides a unique paradigm to study early FTLD. Executive dysfunction is a clinically relevant hallmark of FTLD and may be a marker of disease progression.MethodsNinety-three mutation carriers with no symptoms or minimal/questionable symptoms (MAPT, n = 31; GRN, n = 28; C9orf72, n = 34; Clinical Dementia Rating scale plus NACC FTLD Module < 1) and 78 noncarriers enrolled through Advancing Research and Treatment in Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration/Longitudinal Evaluation of Familial Frontotemporal Dementia Subjects studies completed the Executive Abilities: Measures and Instruments for Neurobehavioral Evaluation and Research (NIH-EXAMINER) and the UDS neuropsychological battery. Linear mixed-effects models were used to identify group differences in cognition at baseline and longitudinally. We examined associations between cognition, clinical functioning, and magnetic resonance imaging volumes.ResultsNIH-EXAMINER scores detected baseline and differences in slopes between carriers and noncarriers, even in carriers with a baseline Clinical Dementia Rating scale plus NACC FTLD Module = 0. NIH-EXAMINER declines were associated with worsening clinical symptoms and brain volume loss.DiscussionThe NIH-EXAMINER is sensitive to cognitive changes in presymptomatic familial FTLD and is a promising surrogate endpoint.