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Amyloid and cerebrovascular burden divergently influence brain functional network changes over time.

Neurology 2019 September 12
OBJECTIVE: To examine the effects of baseline Alzheimer disease and cerebrovascular disease markers on longitudinal default mode network (DMN) and executive control network (ECN) functional connectivity (FC) changes in mild cognitive impairment (MCI).

METHODS: We studied 30 patients with amnestic MCI (aMCI) and 55 patients with subcortical vascular MCI (svMCI) with baseline Pittsburgh Compound B (PiB)-PET scans and longitudinal MRI scans. Participants were followed up clinically with annual MRI for up to 4 years (aMCI: 26 with 2 timepoints, 4 with 3 timepoints; svMCI: 13 with 2 timepoints, 16 with 3 timepoints, 26 with 4 timepoints).

RESULTS: β-Amyloid (Aβ) burden was associated with longitudinal DMN FC declines, while cerebrovascular burden was associated with longitudinal ECN FC changes. When patients were divided into PiB+ and PiB- groups, PiB+ patients showed longitudinal DMN FC declines, while patients with svMCI showed longitudinal ECN FC increases. Direct comparisons between the 2 groups without mixed pathology (aMCI PiB+ and svMCI PiB-) recapitulated this divergent pattern: aMCI PiB+ patients showed steeper longitudinal DMN FC declines, while svMCI PiB- patients showed steeper longitudinal ECN FC increases. Finally, using baseline PiB uptake and lacune numbers as continuous variables, baseline PiB uptake showed inverse U-shape associations with longitudinal DMN FC changes in both MCI subtypes, while baseline lacune numbers showed mainly inverse U-shape relationships with longitudinal ECN FC changes in patients with svMCI.

CONCLUSIONS: Our findings underscore the divergent effects of Aβ and cerebrovascular burden on longitudinal FC changes in the DMN and ECN in the predementia stage, which reflect the underlying pathology and may be used to track early changes in Alzheimer disease and cerebrovascular disease.

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