Right temporal degeneration and socioemotional semantics: semantic behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia

Author:

Younes Kyan12ORCID,Borghesani Valentina1,Montembeault Maxime1,Spina Salvatore1ORCID,Mandelli Maria Luisa1,Welch Ariane E1,Weis Elizabeth1,Callahan Patrick1,Elahi Fanny M1,Hua Alice Y1,Perry David C1,Karydas Anna1,Geschwind Daniel3ORCID,Huang Eric4ORCID,Grinberg Lea T14ORCID,Kramer Joel H1,Boxer Adam L1,Rabinovici Gil D1,Rosen Howard J1,Seeley William W14,Miller Zachary A1ORCID,Miller Bruce L1,Sturm Virginia E1,Rankin Katherine P1,Gorno-Tempini Maria Luisa15

Affiliation:

1. Memory and Aging Center, Department of Neurology, UCSF Weill Institute for Neurosciences, University of California , San Francisco, CA 94158 , USA

2. Department of Neurology and Neurological Sciences, Stanford University , Stanford, CA 94304 , USA

3. Neurogenetics Program, Department of Neurology and Semel Institute for Neuroscience and Human Behavior, David Geffen School of Medicine, University of California , Los Angeles, CA 90024 , USA

4. Department of Pathology, University of California , San Francisco, CA 94143 , USA

5. Dyslexia Center, University of California , San Francisco, CA 94158 , USA

Abstract

Abstract Focal anterior temporal lobe degeneration often preferentially affects the left or right hemisphere. While patients with left-predominant anterior temporal lobe atrophy show severe anomia and verbal semantic deficits and meet criteria for semantic variant primary progressive aphasia and semantic dementia, patients with early right anterior temporal lobe atrophy are more difficult to diagnose as their symptoms are less well understood. Focal right anterior temporal lobe atrophy is associated with prominent emotional and behavioural changes, and patients often meet, or go on to meet, criteria for behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia. Uncertainty around early symptoms and absence of an overarching clinico-anatomical framework continue to hinder proper diagnosis and care of patients with right anterior temporal lobe disease. Here, we examine a large, well-characterized, longitudinal cohort of patients with right anterior temporal lobe-predominant degeneration and propose new criteria and nosology. We identified individuals from our database with a clinical diagnosis of behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia or semantic variant primary progressive aphasia and a structural MRI (n = 478). On the basis of neuroimaging criteria, we defined three patient groups: right anterior temporal lobe-predominant atrophy with relative sparing of the frontal lobes (n = 46), frontal-predominant atrophy with relative sparing of the right anterior temporal lobe (n = 79) and left-predominant anterior temporal lobe-predominant atrophy with relative sparing of the frontal lobes (n = 75). We compared the clinical, neuropsychological, genetic and pathological profiles of these groups. In the right anterior temporal lobe-predominant group, the earliest symptoms were loss of empathy (27%), person-specific semantic impairment (23%) and complex compulsions and rigid thought process (18%). On testing, this group exhibited greater impairments in Emotional Theory of Mind, recognition of famous people (from names and faces) and facial affect naming (despite preserved face perception) than the frontal- and left-predominant anterior temporal lobe-predominant groups. The clinical symptoms in the first 3 years of the disease alone were highly sensitive (81%) and specific (84%) differentiating right anterior temporal lobe-predominant from frontal-predominant groups. Frontotemporal lobar degeneration-transactive response DNA binding protein (84%) was the most common pathology of the right anterior temporal lobe-predominant group. Right anterior temporal lobe-predominant degeneration is characterized by early loss of empathy and person-specific knowledge, deficits that are caused by progressive decline in semantic memory for concepts of socioemotional relevance. Guided by our results, we outline new diagnostic criteria and propose the name, ‘semantic behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia’, which highlights the underlying cognitive mechanism and the predominant symptomatology. These diagnostic criteria will facilitate early identification and care of patients with early, focal right anterior temporal lobe degeneration as well as in vivo prediction of frontotemporal lobar degeneration-transactive response DNA binding protein pathology.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center of California

Larry L. Hillblom Foundation

John Douglas French Alzheimer’s Foundation

Koret Family Foundation

Consortium for Frontotemporal Dementia Research

McBean Family Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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