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EPA-0529 - Impact of White Matter Lesions on the Validity of Iron Deposit Measurement in Early Alzheimer's Disease

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 April 2020

M. Defrancesco
Affiliation:
General and social psychiatry, University Hospital, Innsbruck, Austria
J. Marksteiner
Affiliation:
Psychiatry, Psychiatry Hall, Hall, Austria
E. Deisenhammer
Affiliation:
General and social psychiatry, University Hospital, Innsbruck, Austria
M. Schocke
Affiliation:
Radiology, University Hospital Innsbruck, Innsbruck, Austria

Abstract

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Introduction:

Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) confers a particularly high annual risk of 10-15% of conversion to Alzheimer's disease (AD). Recent findings suggest that regional brain iron concentration measured by quantitative MR relaxation rate R2' may be useful as a biomarker to evaluate the progression of AD.

Objectives:

In this study, we examined the impact of white matter lesion (WML) pathology measured by visual ratings on the validity of iron concentration in converting and stable MCI patients.

Methods:

Retrospective magnetic resonance imaging data were collected for 65 MCI patients. All patients underwent 1.5 Tesla MRI: WML were visually rated on T2 images using the Fazekas and the Scheltens scales, iron concentrations of subcortical regions of interest (ROI) were measured on T2* maps by calculating the transverse relaxation rate R2'. Further, volumes of gray matter (GM), withe matter (WM) and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) were calculated.

Results:

Of 65 subjects, 25 converted to AD during a follow-up of 19.2±7.4 months and 40 remained stable. Converters had significantly more WML in periventricular regions and the temporal lobe as well as lower volume of WM and a higher volume of CSF. In contrast, ROI analysis of iron deposits showed higher iron concentration in the globus pallidus, the insula, the hippocampus and the substantia nigra in non-converters compared to converters.

Conclusion:

Our results suggest that the validity of the measurement of iron deposits as a biomarker for the imminent conversion from MCI to AD may be limited by the presents of WML pathology.

Type
EPW29 - Neuroimaging
Copyright
Copyright © European Psychiatric Association 2014
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