Abner Erin L, Kryscio Richard J, Schmitt Frederick A, Fardo David W, Moga Daniela C, Ighodaro Eseosa T, Jicha Gregory A, Yu Lei, Dodge Hiroko H, Xiong Chengjie, Woltjer Randall L, Schneider Julie A, Cairns Nigel J, Bennett David A, Nelson Peter T
Department of Epidemiology, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.
Department of Biostatistics, University of Kentucky, Lexington, KY.
Ann Neurol. 2017 Apr;81(4):549-559. doi: 10.1002/ana.24903. Epub 2017 Mar 22.
To determine clinical and neuropathological outcomes following a clinical diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment (MCI).
Data were drawn from a large autopsy series (N = 1,337) of individuals followed longitudinally from normal or MCI status to death, derived from 4 Alzheimer Disease (AD) Centers in the United States.
Mean follow-up was 7.9 years. Of the 874 individuals ever diagnosed with MCI, final clinical diagnoses were varied: 39.2% died with an MCI diagnosis, 46.8% with a dementia diagnosis, and 13.9% with a diagnosis of intact cognition. The latter group had pathological features resembling those with a final clinical diagnosis of MCI. In terms of non-AD pathologies, both primary age-related tauopathy (p < 0.05) and brain arteriolosclerosis pathology (p < 0.001) were more severe in MCI than cognitively intact controls. Among the group that remained MCI until death, mixed AD neuropathologic changes (ADNC; ≥1 comorbid pathology) were more frequent than "pure" ADNC pathology (55% vs 22%); suspected non-Alzheimer pathology comprised the remaining 22% of cases. A majority (74%) of subjects who died with MCI were without "high"-level ADNC, Lewy body disease, or hippocampal sclerosis pathologies; this group was enriched in cerebrovascular pathologies. Subjects who died with dementia and were without severe neurodegenerative pathologies tended to have cerebrovascular pathology and carry the MCI diagnosis for a longer interval.
MCI diagnosis usually was associated with comorbid neuropathologies; less than one-quarter of MCI cases showed "pure" AD at autopsy. Ann Neurol 2017;81:549-559.
确定轻度认知障碍(MCI)临床诊断后的临床和神经病理学结局。
数据来自美国4个阿尔茨海默病(AD)中心的一个大型尸检系列研究(N = 1337),这些个体从正常或MCI状态开始纵向随访直至死亡。
平均随访时间为7.9年。在874例曾被诊断为MCI的个体中,最终临床诊断各不相同:39.2%死亡时诊断为MCI,46.8%诊断为痴呆,13.9%诊断为认知功能完好。后一组的病理特征与最终临床诊断为MCI的个体相似。在非AD病理学方面,MCI患者的原发性年龄相关性tau病(p < 0.05)和脑小动脉硬化病理学(p < 0.001)均比认知功能完好的对照组更严重。在直至死亡仍为MCI的组中,混合性AD神经病理学改变(ADNC;≥1种合并病理学改变)比“单纯”ADNC病理学改变更常见(55%对22%);疑似非阿尔茨海默病病理学改变占其余22%的病例。大多数(74%)死于MCI的受试者没有“高级别”ADNC、路易体病或海马硬化病理学改变;该组脑血管病理学改变更为丰富。死于痴呆且没有严重神经退行性病理学改变的受试者往往有脑血管病理学改变,且MCI诊断持续时间更长。
MCI诊断通常与合并神经病理学改变相关;不到四分之一的MCI病例在尸检时显示“单纯”AD。《神经病学纪事》2017年;81:549 - 559。