Lewy Body Disease is a Contributor to Logopenic Progressive Aphasia Phenotype

dc.contributor.authorBuciuc, Marina
dc.contributor.authorWhitwell, Jennifer L.
dc.contributor.authorKasanuki, Koji
dc.contributor.authorGraff-Radford, Jonathan
dc.contributor.authorMachulda, Mary M.
dc.contributor.authorDuffy, Joseph R.
dc.contributor.authorStrand, Edythe A.
dc.contributor.authorLowe, Val J.
dc.contributor.authorGraff-Radford, Neill R.
dc.contributor.authorRush, Beth K.
dc.contributor.authorFranczak, Malgorzata B.
dc.contributor.authorFlanagan, Margaret E.
dc.contributor.authorBaker, Matthew C.
dc.contributor.authorRademakers, Rosa
dc.contributor.authorRoss, Owen A.
dc.contributor.authorGhetti, Bernardino F.
dc.contributor.authorParisi, Joseph E.
dc.contributor.authorRaghunathan, Aditya
dc.contributor.authorReichard, R. Ross
dc.contributor.authorBigio, Eileen H.
dc.contributor.authorDickson, Dennis W.
dc.contributor.authorJosephs, Keith A.
dc.contributor.departmentPathology and Laboratory Medicine, School of Medicine
dc.date.accessioned2024-03-07T17:53:06Z
dc.date.available2024-03-07T17:53:06Z
dc.date.issued2021
dc.description.abstractObjective: The objective of this study was to describe clinical features, [18 F]-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG)-positron emission tomography (PET) metabolism and digital pathology in patients with logopenic progressive aphasia (LPA) and pathologic diagnosis of diffuse Lewy body disease (DLBD) and compare to patients with LPA with other pathologies, as well as patients with classical features of probable dementia with Lewy bodies (pDLB). Methods: This is a clinicopathologic case-control study of 45 patients, including 20 prospectively recruited patients with LPA among whom 6 were diagnosed with LPA-DLBD. We analyzed clinical features and compared FDG-PET metabolism in LPA-DLBD to an independent group of patients with clinical pDLB and regional α-synuclein burden on digital pathology to a second independent group of autopsied patients with DLBD pathology and antemortem pDLB (DLB-DLBD). Results: All patients with LPA-DLBD were men. Neurological, speech, and neuropsychological characteristics were similar across LPA-DLBD, LPA-Alzheimer's disease (LPA-AD), and LPA-frontotemporal lobar degeneration (LPA-FTLD). Genetic screening of AD, DLBD, and FTLD linked genes were negative with the exception of APOE ε4 allele present in 83% of LPA-DLBD patients. Seventy-five percent of the patients with LPA-DLBD showed a parietal-dominant pattern of hy pometabolism; LPA-FTLD - temporal-dominant pattern, whereas LPA-AD showed heterogeneous patterns of hypometabolism. LPA-DLBD had more asymmetrical hypometabolism affecting frontal lobes, with relatively spared occipital lobe in the nondominantly affected hemisphere, compared to pDLB. LPA-DLBD had minimal atrophy on gross brain examination, higher cortical Lewy body counts, and higher α-synuclein burden in the middle frontal and inferior parietal cortices compared to DLB-DLBD. Interpretation: Whereas AD is the most frequent underlying pathology of LPA, DLBD can also be present and may contribute to the LPA phenotype possibly due to α-synuclein-associated functional impairment of the dominant parietal lobe.
dc.eprint.versionAuthor's manuscript
dc.identifier.citationBuciuc M, Whitwell JL, Kasanuki K, et al. Lewy Body Disease is a Contributor to Logopenic Progressive Aphasia Phenotype. Ann Neurol. 2021;89(3):520-533. doi:10.1002/ana.25979
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/1805/39096
dc.language.isoen_US
dc.publisherWiley
dc.relation.isversionof10.1002/ana.25979
dc.relation.journalAnnals of Neurology
dc.rightsPublisher Policy
dc.sourcePMC
dc.subjectAlzheimer disease
dc.subjectFrontotemporal lobar degeneration
dc.subjectLewy body disease
dc.subjectRadiopharmaceuticals
dc.titleLewy Body Disease is a Contributor to Logopenic Progressive Aphasia Phenotype
dc.typeArticle
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