Adler Charles H, Beach Thomas G, Zhang Nan, Shill Holly A, Driver-Dunckley Erika, Mehta Shyamal H, Atri Alireza, Caviness John N, Serrano Geidy, Shprecher David R, Sue Lucia I, Belden Christine M
Parkinson's Disease and Movement Disorders Center (CHA, EDD, SHM), Department of Neurology, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Mayo Clinic Arizona, Scottsdale; Civin Laboratory for Neuropathology (TGB, GS, LIS), Banner Sun Health Research Institute, Sun City, AZ; Department of Biostatistics (NZ), Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Mayo Clinic Arizona, Scottsdale; Barrow Neurologic Institute (HAS), Phoenix, AZ; Cleo Roberts Center (AA, DRS, CMB), Banner Sun Health Research Institute, Sun City, AZ; and Center for Brain/Mind Medicine (AA), Department of Neurology, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA.
Neurol Clin Pract. 2021 Aug;11(4):e414-e421. doi: 10.1212/CPJ.0000000000001016.
To update data for diagnostic accuracy of a clinical diagnosis of Parkinson disease (PD) using neuropathologic diagnosis as the gold standard.
Data from the Arizona Study of Aging and Neurodegenerative Disorders (AZSAND) were used to determine the predictive value of a clinical PD diagnosis. Two clinical diagnostic confidence levels were used, possible PD (PossPD, never treated or not responsive) and probable PD (ProbPD, 2/3 cardinal clinical signs and responsive to dopaminergic medications). Neuropathologic diagnosis was the gold standard.
Based on the first visit to AZSAND, 15/54 (27.8%) PossPD participants and 138/163 (84.7%) ProbPD participants had confirmed PD. PD was confirmed in 24/34 (70.6%) ProbPD with <5 years and 114/128 (89.1%) with ≥5 years disease duration. Using the consensus final clinical diagnosis following death, 161/187 (86.1%) ProbPD had neuropathologically confirmed PD. Diagnostic accuracy for ProbPD improved if included motor fluctuations, dyskinesias, and hyposmia, and hyposmia for PossPD.
This updated study confirmed lower clinical diagnostic accuracy for elderly, untreated or poorly responsive PossPD participants and for ProbPD with <5 years of disease duration, even when medication responsive. Caution continues to be needed when interpreting clinical studies of PD, especially studies of early disease, that do not have autopsy confirmation.
This study provides Class II evidence that a clinical diagnosis of ProbPD at the first visit identifies participants who will have pathologically confirmed PD with a sensitivity of 82.6% and a specificity of 86.0%.
以神经病理学诊断为金标准,更新帕金森病(PD)临床诊断的诊断准确性数据。
使用来自亚利桑那衰老与神经退行性疾病研究(AZSAND)的数据来确定临床PD诊断的预测价值。采用了两种临床诊断置信水平,可能的PD(PossPD,从未接受治疗或无反应)和很可能的PD(ProbPD,具备2/3主要临床体征且对多巴胺能药物有反应)。神经病理学诊断为金标准。
基于首次就诊于AZSAND的数据,15/54(27.8%)的PossPD参与者和138/163(84.7%)的ProbPD参与者经证实患有PD。病程<5年的ProbPD参与者中有24/34(70.6%)经证实患有PD,病程≥5年的有114/128(89.1%)。根据死亡后的最终临床诊断共识,161/187(86.1%)的ProbPD经神经病理学证实患有PD。如果纳入运动波动、异动症和嗅觉减退,ProbPD的诊断准确性会提高,而嗅觉减退对PossPD也有意义。
这项更新研究证实,对于老年、未治疗或反应不佳的PossPD参与者以及病程<5年的ProbPD参与者,即使对药物有反应,其临床诊断准确性也较低。在解释PD的临床研究时,尤其是那些没有尸检确认的早期疾病研究时,仍需谨慎。
本研究提供II级证据,即首次就诊时ProbPD的临床诊断可识别出经病理证实患有PD的参与者,敏感性为82.6%,特异性为86.0%。