The architecture of abnormal reward behaviour in dementia: multimodal hedonic phenotypes and brain substrate

Author:

Chokesuwattanaskul Anthipa123ORCID,Jiang Harmony1,Bond Rebecca L1,Jimenez Daniel A14,Russell Lucy L1,Sivasathiaseelan Harri1,Johnson Jeremy C S1,Benhamou Elia1,Agustus Jennifer L1,van Leeuwen Janneke E P1,Chokesuwattanaskul Peerapat5,Hardy Chris J D1,Marshall Charles R16,Rohrer Jonathan D1,Warren Jason D1

Affiliation:

1. Dementia Research Centre, Department of Neurodegenerative Disease, UCL Queen Square Institute of Neurology, University College London , London , UK

2. Division of Neurology, Department of Internal Medicine, King Chulalongkorn Memorial Hospital, Thai Red Cross Society , Bangkok , Thailand

3. Cognitive Clinical and Computational Neuroscience Research Unit, Faculty of Medicine, Chulalongkorn University , Bangkok , Thailand

4. Department of Neurological Sciences, Faculty of Medicine, University of Chile , Santiago , Chile

5. Faculty of Law, Chulalongkorn University , Bangkok , Thailand

6. Preventive Neurology Unit, Wolfson Institute of Population Health, Queen Mary University of London , London , UK

Abstract

AbstractAbnormal reward processing is a hallmark of neurodegenerative diseases, most strikingly in frontotemporal dementia. However, the phenotypic repertoire and neuroanatomical substrates of abnormal reward behaviour in these diseases remain incompletely characterized and poorly understood. Here we addressed these issues in a large, intensively phenotyped patient cohort representing all major syndromes of sporadic frontotemporal dementia and Alzheimer’s disease. We studied 27 patients with behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia, 58 with primary progressive aphasia (22 semantic variant, 24 non-fluent/agrammatic variant and 12 logopenic) and 34 with typical amnestic Alzheimer’s disease, in relation to 42 healthy older individuals. Changes in behavioural responsiveness were assessed for canonical primary rewards (appetite, sweet tooth, sexual activity) and non-primary rewards (music, religion, art, colours), using a semi-structured survey completed by patients’ primary caregivers. Changes in more general socio-emotional behaviours were also recorded. We applied multiple correspondence analysis and k-means clustering to map relationships between hedonic domains and extract core factors defining aberrant hedonic phenotypes. Neuroanatomical associations were assessed using voxel-based morphometry of brain MRI images across the combined patient cohort. Altered (increased and/or decreased) reward responsiveness was exhibited by most patients in the behavioural and semantic variants of frontotemporal dementia and around two-thirds of patients in other dementia groups, significantly (P < 0.05) more frequently than in healthy controls. While food-directed changes were most prevalent across the patient cohort, behavioural changes directed toward non-primary rewards occurred significantly more frequently (P < 0.05) in the behavioural and semantic variants of frontotemporal dementia than in other patient groups. Hedonic behavioural changes across the patient cohort were underpinned by two principal factors: a ‘gating’ factor determining the emergence of altered reward behaviour and a ‘modulatory’ factor determining how that behaviour is directed. These factors were expressed jointly in a set of four core, trans-diagnostic and multimodal hedonic phenotypes: ‘reward-seeking’, ‘reward-restricted’, ‘eating-predominant’ and ‘control-like’—variably represented across the cohort and associated with more pervasive socio-emotional behavioural abnormalities. The principal gating factor was associated (P < 0.05 after correction for multiple voxel-wise comparisons over the whole brain) with a common profile of grey matter atrophy in anterior cingulate, bilateral temporal poles, right middle frontal and fusiform gyri: the cortical circuitry that mediates behavioural salience and semantic and affective appraisal of sensory stimuli. Our findings define a multi-domain phenotypic architecture for aberrant reward behaviours in major dementias, with novel implications for the neurobiological understanding and clinical management of these diseases.

Funder

The Dementia Research Centre

Alzheimer’s Research UK

Brain Research UK

Wolfson Foundation

Alzheimer’s Society

National Institute for Health Research University College London Hospitals Biomedical Research Centre

Medical Research Council PhD studentship

Chilean Government scholarship

Clinical Research

Leonard Wolfson Experimental Neurology Centre

Association of British Neurologists Clinical Research Training Fellowship

Brain Research UK PhD Studentship

Engineering and Physical Sciences Research Council PhD Studentship

The Royal National Institute for Deaf People–Dunhill Medical Trust Pauline Ashley Fellowship

Wellcome Institutional Strategic Support Fund

Bart’s Charity

Miriam Marks Brain Research UK Senior Fellowship

Medical Research Council Clinician Scientist Fellowship

National Institute for Health and Care Research Rare Disease Translational Research Collaboration

National Brain Appeal

UK Research and Innovation and the Wellcome Trust

Creative Commons Attribution

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Biological Psychiatry,Psychiatry and Mental health

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