Faster Cortical Thinning and Surface Area Loss in Presymptomatic and Symptomatic C9orf72 Repeat Expansion Adult Carriers.

Gabriella Le Blanc ; Vincent Jetté Pomerleau ; Jillian McCarthy ; Barbara Borroni ; John van Swieten ; Daniela Galimberti ; Raquel Sanchez-Valle ; Robert LaForce ; Fermin Moreno ; Matthis Synofzik ; +19 more... Caroline Graff ; Mario Masellis ; Maria C Tartaglia ; James B Rowe ; Rik Vandenberghe ; Elizabeth Finger ; Fabrizio Tagliavini ; Alexandre de Mendonça ; Isabel Santana ; Chris Butler ; Alex Gerhard ; Adrian Danek ; Johannes Levin ; Markus Otto ; Giovanni Frisoni ; Sandro Sorbi ; Jonathan D Rohrer ; Simon Ducharme ORCID logo ; Genetic Frontotemporal Dementia Initiative (GENFI) ; (2020) Faster Cortical Thinning and Surface Area Loss in Presymptomatic and Symptomatic C9orf72 Repeat Expansion Adult Carriers. Annals of neurology, 88 (1). pp. 113-122. ISSN 0364-5134 DOI: 10.1002/ana.25748
Copy

OBJECTIVE: C9orf72 expansion is the most common genetic cause of frontotemporal dementia (FTD). We examined aging trajectories of cortical thickness (CTh) and surface area in C9orf72 expansion adult carriers compared to healthy controls to characterize preclinical cerebral changes leading to symptoms. METHODS: Data were obtained from the Genetic Frontotemporal Dementia Initiative. T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging scans were processed with CIVET 2.1 to extract vertex-wide CTh and cortical surface area (CSA). Symptomatic and presymptomatic subjects were compared to age-matched controls using mixed-effects models, controlling for demographic variables. Aging trajectories were compared between carriers and noncarriers by testing the "age by genetic status" interaction. False discovery rate corrections were applied to all vertex-wide analyses. RESULTS: The sample included 640 scans from 386 subjects, including 54 symptomatic C9orf72 carriers (72.2% behavioral variant FTD), 83 asymptomatic carriers, and 249 controls (age range = 18-86 years). Symptomatic carriers showed fairly symmetric reduction in CTh/CSA in most of the frontal lobes, in addition to large temporoparietal areas. Presymptomatic subjects had reduced CTh/CSA in more restricted areas of the medial frontoparietal lobes, in addition to scattered lateral frontal, parietal, and temporal areas. These differences were explained by faster cortical thinning linearly throughout adulthood in a similar anatomical distribution, with differences emerging in the early 30s. CSA reduction was also faster in mutation carriers predominantly in the ventrofrontal regions. INTERPRETATION: C9orf72 mutation carriers have faster cortical thinning and surface loss throughout adulthood in regions that show atrophy in symptomatic subjects. This suggests that the pathogenic effects of the mutation lead to structural cerebral changes decades prior to symptoms. ANN NEUROL 2020 ANN NEUROL 2020;88:113-122.


picture_as_pdf
LeBlanc-etal-2020-Faster-Cortical-Thinning-and-Surface-Area-Loss.pdf
subject
Accepted Version
copyright
Available under Copyright the publishers

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL Data Cite XML EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads