Analysis of positron emission tomography hypometabolic patterns and neuropsychiatric symptoms in patients with dementia syndromes

Author:

Gan Jinghuan1,Shi Zhihong2,Zuo Chuantao3,Zhao Xiaobin4,Liu Shuai2,Chen Yongjie56,Zhang Nan7ORCID,Cai Li8,Cui Ruixue9,Ai Lin4,Guan Yi‐Hui3,Ji Yong2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Neurology, Beijing Tiantan Hospital Capital Medical University, China National Clinical Research Center for Neurological Diseases Beijing China

2. Department of Neurology, Tianjin Dementia Institute, Tianjin Key Laboratory of Cerebrovascular and Neurodegenerative Diseases Tianjin Huanhu Hospital Tianjin China

3. PET Center, Huashan Hospital Fudan University Shanghai China

4. Department of Nuclear Medicine, Beijing Tiantan Hospital Capital Medical University Beijing China

5. Department of Epidemiology and Statistics, School of Public Health Tianjin Medical University Tianjin China

6. Tianjin Key Laboratory of Environment, Nutrition and Public Health Tianjin China

7. Department of Neurology General Hospital of Tianjin Medical University Tianjin China

8. Department of PET‐CT Diagnostics Tianjin Medical University General Hospital Tianjin China

9. Department of Nuclear Medicine, Peking Union Medical College Hospital Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College Beijing China

Abstract

AbstractAimsTo estimate the proportions of specific hypometabolic patterns and their association with neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS) in patients with cognitive impairment (CI).MethodsThis multicenter study with 1037 consecutive patients was conducted from December 2012 to December 2019. 18F‐FDG PET and clinical/demographic information, NPS assessments were recorded and analyzed to explore the associations between hypometabolic patterns and clinical features by correlation analysis and multivariable logistic regression models.ResultsPatients with clinical Alzheimer's disease (AD, 81.6%, 605/741) and dementia with Lewy bodies (67.9%, 19/28) mostly had AD‐pattern hypometabolism, and 76/137 (55.5%) of patients with frontotemporal lobar degeneration showed frontal and anterior temporal pattern (FT‐P) hypometabolism. Besides corticobasal degeneration, patients with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (36/58), semantic dementia (7/10), progressive non‐fluent aphasia (6/9), frontotemporal lobar degeneration and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (3/5), and progressive supranuclear palsy (21/37) also mostly showed FT‐P hypometabolism. The proportion of FT‐P hypometabolism was associated with the presence of hallucinations (R = 0.171, p = 0.04), anxiety (R = 0.182, p = 0.03), and appetite and eating abnormalities (R = 0.200, p = 0.01) in AD.ConclusionSpecific hypometabolic patterns in FDG‐PET are associated with NPS and beneficial for the early identification and management of NPS in patients with CI.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Tianjin Science and Technology Program

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Physiology (medical),Psychiatry and Mental health,Pharmacology

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