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Characteristics of very late-onset schizophrenia-like psychosis classified with the biomarkers for Alzheimer’s disease: a retrospective cross-sectional study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 January 2023

Yuto Satake
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Suita, Japan
Hideki Kanemoto*
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Suita, Japan
Daiki Taomoto
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Suita, Japan
Takashi Suehiro
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Suita, Japan
Fuyuki Koizumi
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Suita, Japan
Shunsuke Sato
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Suita, Japan
Tamiki Wada
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Suita, Japan
Keiko Matsunaga
Affiliation:
Department of Molecular Imaging in Medicine, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Suita, Japan
Eku Shimosegawa
Affiliation:
Department of Molecular Imaging in Medicine, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Suita, Japan
Shiho Gotoh
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Suita, Japan
Kohji Mori
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Suita, Japan
Takashi Morihara
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Suita, Japan Department of Psychiatry, Toyonaka Municipal Hospital, Toyonaka, Japan
Kenji Yoshiyama
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Suita, Japan
Manabu Ikeda
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, Suita, Japan
*
Correspondence should be addressed to: Hideki Kanemoto, MD, PhD, Department of Psychiatry, Osaka University Graduate School of Medicine, D3 2-2 Yamadaoka, Suita, Osaka 565-0871, Japan. Tel: +81 6 6879 3051; Fax: +81 6 6879 3059. Email: [email protected]

Abstract

Objectives:

We aimed to investigate the association between very late-onset schizophrenia-like psychosis (VLOSLP), a schizophrenia spectrum disorder with an onset of ≥60 years, and Alzheimer’s disease (AD) using biomarkers.

Design:

Retrospective cross-sectional study.

Setting:

Neuropsychology clinic of Osaka University Hospital in Japan.

Participants:

Thirty-three participants were classified into three groups: eight AD biomarker-negative VLOSLP (VLOSLP−AD), nine AD biomarker-positive VLOSLP (VLOSLP+AD), and sixteen amnestic mild cognitive impairment due to AD without psychosis (aMCI−P+AD) participants.

Measurements:

Phosphorylated tau levels in the cerebrospinal fluid and 18F-Florbetapir positron emission tomography results were used as AD biomarkers. Several scales (e.g. the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised (WMS-R) Logical Memory (LM) I and II, and Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI)-plus) were conducted to assess clinical characteristics.

Results:

Those in both VLOSLP−AD and +AD groups scored higher than those in aMCI−P+AD in WMS-R LM I. On the other hand, VLOSLP+AD participants scored in between the other two groups in the WMS-R LM II, with only VLOSLP−AD participants scoring significantly higher than aMCI−P+AD participants. There were no significant differences in sex distribution and MMSE scores among the three groups or in the subtype of psychotic symptoms between VLOSLP−AD and +AD participants. Four VLOSLP−AD and five VLOSLP+AD participants harbored partition delusions. Delusion of theft was shown in two VLOSLP−AD patients and five VLOSLP+AD patients.

Conclusion:

Some VLOSLP patients had AD pathology. Clinical characteristics were different between AD biomarker-positive and AD biomarker-negative VLOSLP, which may be helpful for detecting AD pathology in VLOSLP patients.

Type
Original Research Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© International Psychogeriatric Association 2023

Introduction

Very late-onset schizophrenia-like psychosis (VLOSLP) is a disease entity for psychotic disorders with an age of onset of over 60 years, proposed by the International Late-Onset Schizophrenia Research Group in 2000 (Howard et al., Reference Howard2000). It retains concepts from older terms for late-onset psychotic disorders including “late paraphrenia,” advocated by Kay and Roth circa 1960 (Kay and Roth, Reference Kay and Roth1961; Roth, Reference Roth1955). VLOSLP features characteristics such as a female preponderance, solitary living, persecutory (especially partition) delusions, and lack of negative symptoms (Howard et al., Reference Howard, Castle, O'Brien, Almeida and Levy1992; Kay and Roth, Reference Kay and Roth1961). Although current operational diagnostic criteria such as the Diagnostic and Statistical Manuals of psychiatric disease (DSM) (American Psychiatric Association, 2022) and International Criteria of Disease (ICD) (World Health Organization, 2019) do not differentiate psychotic disorders, including the schizophrenia spectrum, by age of onset, many researchers have studied late paraphrenia and/or VLOSLP because of their distinct characteristics, unknown etiology, and frequency in psychogeriatric clinical practice.

Although the criteria for VLOSLP states that the psychosis should not be attributed to affective disorders or to focal or structural brain abnormalities, whether psychotic symptoms in VLOSLP are related to neurodegenerative diseases remains uncertain. Several reports showed that many VLOSLP patients were diagnosed with dementia within several years of follow-ups (Brodaty et al., Reference Brodaty, Sachdev, Koschera, Monk and Cullen2003; Kørner et al., Reference Kørner, Lopez, Lauritzen, Andersen and Kessing2009). Using nationwide population registry data, Stafford et al. showed that individuals with VLOSLP represented a high-risk group for subsequent dementia (Stafford et al., Reference Stafford, Dykxhoorn, Sommerlad, Dalman, Kirkbride and Howard2021). Some pathological studies showed the predominance of argyrophilic grain disease, Lewy body disease in late-onset schizophrenia, delusional disorders (Nagao et al., Reference Nagao2014), and primary age-related tauopathy in late-onset schizophrenia (Casanova et al., Reference Casanova, Stevens, Brown, Royston and Bruton2002). In the context of AD, there were few reports about AD pathology in VLOSLP and late-onset psychosis has been rather studied as symptoms of mild behavioral disorder (MBI), pre-dementia late-onset neuropsychiatric symptoms (Creese and Ismail, Reference Creese and Ismail2022). Although differentiating late-onset psychotic disorders with concurrent AD pathology from late-onset psychosis attributable to AD with subtle cognitive impairments is considered difficult, clinical characteristics such as details of psychosis may differ (Fischer et al., Reference Fischer2020).

For the present study, we included patients from our neuropsychology clinic’s cohort who were diagnosed with VLOSLP and had been tested for AD biomarkers to confirm the presence of VLOSLP patients who were presumed to have a concurrent AD pathology. We then compared the demographic, neuropsychological, and psychiatric characteristics of those with positive and negative results for AD biomarkers. For comparison, we also enrolled patients with amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) due to AD without psychotic symptoms. Although we previously reported a case with VLOSLP and AD confirmed with biomarkers and a longitudinal follow-up (Satake et al., Reference Satake2021), it remains unclear to what extent VLOSLP patients may have Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pathology and what characteristics are different between VLOSLP with and without AD pathology. We hypothesized that some VLOSLP patients will be positive for AD biomarkers and that they will have different characteristics from those who are negative for AD biomarkers and those with aMCI due to AD but without psychosis.

Methods

Study design

This was a retrospective observational study with no intervention. The information from all participants was anonymized prior to analysis as unlinked data to prevent the identification of personal information. The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committees on human experimentation and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008. The Osaka University Clinical Research Review Committee (Suita, Japan) approved this study. The requirement of written informed consent was waived by the Review Committee and opt-out was implemented.

Participants

We selected participants from the database of consecutive Japanese patients visiting the neuropsychology clinic in the Department of Psychiatry at Osaka University Hospital for the first time from January 2018 to December 2021. Cases lacking data on Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR), and Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI)-plus were excluded. We defined VLOSLP according to the criteria adopted by previous studies (Kanemoto et al., Reference Kanemoto2022). The inclusion criteria were as follows: (1) onset of delusions and/or hallucinations at the age of 60 years or more, and (2) existence of delusions and/or hallucinations at the first visit. The existence of psychosis (delusions and/or hallucinations) was confirmed by the NPI-plus sub-items of delusions and hallucinations. The exclusion criteria were as follows: (1) an MMSE score <24; (2) a global CDR score ≥; (3) diagnosis of affective disorder; (4) abnormal localized findings on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans, indicating cerebrovascular disease or brain tumor; and (5) a concurrent organic disease that could cause psychosis or physical symptoms suggestive of the disease. We identified the VLOSLP patients who also had data of AD biomarkers (cerebrospinal fluid [CSF] phosphorylated tau [p-tau] or amyloid positron emission tomography [PET]). We then divided VLOSLP patients into those with positive and negative results for AD biomarkers, which we described further in a latter section.

We also selected aMCI patients from the same database. The diagnosis of aMCI was also based on the Petersen’s criteria adopted by previous studies (Kazui et al., Reference Kazui2017) which were as follows: (1) a memory complaint documented by the patient or another source; (2) a score of 1.5 standard deviation (SD) below the education-adjusted normal value in the story A recall task in the logical memory (LM) II subtest of the Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised (WMS-R); (3) a score of MMSE ≥; 24; (4) a CDR global score = 0.5; and (5) normal basic and instrumental activities of daily living evaluated with Lawton’s Physical Self-Maintenance Scale and Instrumental Activities of Daily Living Scale (Lawton and Brody, Reference Lawton and Brody1969). For the present analysis, we selected patients with aMCI due to AD without psychosis from all aMCI patients; the exclusion criteria were: (1) existence of psychosis at the first visit; (2) showing negative results for AD biomarkers; (3) onset <60 years; (4) diagnosis of affective disorder; (5) abnormal localized findings on MRI scans, indicating cerebrovascular disease or brain tumor; and (6) coexistence of organic diseases that could cause psychosis or physical symptoms suggestive of them.

Assessment of clinical features

We routinely assessed the physical condition, demographic data, and medical history at our neuropsychology clinic and performed standard neuropsychological examinations. In addition, the patients underwent routine laboratory tests and brain neuroimaging. General cognition was assessed using MMSE. Memory was evaluated with the LM I and LM II subtests. Attention was evaluated with weighted raw score sums for the Attention/Concentration (A/C) index composed of Mental Control, Digit Span, and Visual Memory Span subtests in WMS-R. In addition, psychomotor speed, visuospatial cognition, and language were evaluated using the Digit-Symbol-Coding, Block Design, and Information in Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale-III (WAIS-III). These were conducted by clinical psychologists and neuropsychiatrists specializing in geriatric psychiatry. Neuropsychiatric symptoms were assessed using the NPI-plus, the original NPI-12 with an additional subitem for cognitive fluctuation (Cummings, Reference Cummings1997; Mori, et al., Reference Mori, Ikeda and Kosaka2012), by neuropsychiatrists specializing in geriatric psychiatry. This study allowed missing data on scales other than MMSE, CDR, and NPI-plus. Detailed information on psychiatric symptoms of VLOSLP participants was collected and summarized through chart review.

Amyloid PET and CSF analysis

We used 18F-Florbetapir amyloid PET results and CSF p-tau levels as AD biomarkers. We collected the results of amyloid PET and CSF testing performed within three years from the first visit for the comparison of cross-sectional data with other clinical data. When the two biomarkers were not concordant, we followed the result of amyloid PET.

18F-Florbetapir was injected intravenously as a slow bolus in an antecubital vein at a mean ± SD dose of 270 ± 51 MBq (range, 182–370 MBq). A 20 min list-mode PET scan was obtained after an uptake time of 40 min (range, 40–43 min), following the imaging acquisition guidelines for Amyvid (https://pi.lilly.com/us/amyvid-uspi.pdf). KMa and ES, who are both nuclear medicine specialists, evaluated each PET result as positive or negative for AD.

We obtained CSF samples from patients who were admitted to our university hospital for diagnosis and treatment. All samples were collected via a lumbar puncture between 10:00 and 12:00 while the patient was fasting; the first 1 mL of CSF from each lumbar tap was discarded. All CSF samples were sent to SRL, Inc. (Tokyo, Japan), where both p-tau and total tau (t-tau) levels were measured in duplicate using enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (Finoscholar™ p-Tau and hTau [NIPRO Corporation, Osaka, Japan]); we adopted the cutoff ≥50 pg/mL of p-tau, which the SRL, Inc. set for the diagnosis of AD.

Amyloid concentrations in the CSF were also analyzed. The CSF samples were centrifuged at 430 × g for 5 min. The supernatants were aliquoted and stored at -80°C until assay. Aβ 1-40 and Aβ 1–42 concentrations were measured with enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay kits (Human β Amyloid [1–40] ELISA Kit Wako II (298-64601), Human β Amyloid 1–42 ELISA Kit, High-Sensitive (296-64401) [FUJIFILM Wako Pure Chemical Corporation, Osaka, Japan]) according to the manufacturer’s protocol. Genotyping of APOE polymorphisms was performed by performing the TaqMan SNP assay (Assay ID: C____904973_10, C___3084793_20) as previously described (Morihara et al., Reference Morihara2014).

Statistical Analyses

All participants were classified into three groups: VLOSLP with negative results for AD biomarkers (VLOSLP−AD), VLOSLP with positive results (VLOSLP+AD), and aMCI due to AD without psychosis (aMCI−P+AD). We compared the three groups using the Kruskal–Wallis test for continuous variables (e.g. some demographic characteristics and neuropsychological test scores). We also performed the Dunn–Bonferroni post hoc test when we found statistically significant differences. The Fisher’s exact test was used for the categorical variables (e.g. other demographic characteristics and for NPI-plus sub-items). For delusions and hallucinations on the NPI-plus, the Fisher’s exact test was also used to compare responses of the VLOSLP−AD and VLOSLP+AD groups to each sub-question about psychosis. All statistical analyses used were two-tailed with p < 0.05 considered to indicate statistical significance. These analyses were performed using SPSS Statistics for Windows, Version 27.0. (IBM Corp., Armonk, NY, USA).

Results

Demographic characteristics, AD biomarkers, and APOE genotyping in the selected participants

A enrollment flowchart is shown in Figure 1. Of the 805 patients who visited our neuropsychological clinic from January 2018 to December 2021, 679 had NPI-plus and CDR data. Of these, 36 met the criteria for VLOSLP, and 100 met the criteria for aMCI without psychosis. Finally, 8 patients in VLOSLP−AD, 9 patients in VLOSLP+AD, and 16 patients in aMCI−P+AD were enrolled as participants in this study. The numbers of testing for amyloid PET and CSF p-tau were not significantly different between the groups (Table 1). Five participants had CSF p-tau levels <50 pg/mL in the VLOSLP−AD group; all in the aMCI−P+AD and VLOSLP+AD groups had >50 pg/mL. In one participant in the VLOSLP−AD, amyloid PET and CSF p-tau showed conflicting results (PET showed a negative result but p-tau was positive at 61 pg/mL); we adopted the result of amyloid PET in classifying this patient.

Figure 1. Enrollment flowchart. Abbreviation: NPI-plus, Neuropsychiatric inventory-plus; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating; aMCI, amnestic mild cognitive impairment; VLOSLP, very late-onset schizophrenia-like psychosis; AD, Alzheimer’s disease.

Table 1. Demographic characteristics, CSF tau and Aβ concentration, and results of APOE genotyping

Data other than of APOE ϵ4 carrier are presented as median [interquartile range] or number (%); The percentage of APOE ϵ4 carriers is the rate (%) of ϵ4 carriers divided by the number of participants who underwent APOE genotyping. The Kruskal–Wallis test was used for continuous variables, and the post hoc Dunn’s test was performed when statistically significant results were found. Fisher’s exact test was used for categorical data. All statistical analyses used a two-tailed test with statistical significance set at p < 0.05; statistically significant p-values are in bold. Onset age means the age at cognitive deterioration or psychosis was noted. Abbreviations: APOE, apolipoprotein E; AD, Alzheimer’s disease; VLOSLP, very late-onset schizophrenia-like psychosis; VLOSLP−AD, VLOSLP showing negative results for AD biomarkers; VLOSLP+AD, VLOSLP showing positive results for AD biomarkers; aMCI−P+AD, amnestic mild cognitive impairment due to AD without psychosis; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating; CDR-SOB, CDR sum of boxes; ChE-I, cholinesterase inhibitor; PET, positron emission tomography; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; Aβ, amyloid beta; t-tau, total tau; p-tau, phosphorylated tau.

Table 1 summarizes other demographic characteristics, CSF tau, and Aβ concentrations, and the results of APOE genotyping in the three groups. No significant differences in education years, MMSE scores, CDR scores, CDR sum of boxes, sex distribution, percentage living alone, cholinesterase inhibitor use, and antipsychotic use were seen. Age and onset age showed significant differences (p = 0.017 and 0.024, respectively). The post hoc analysis showed participants in VLOSLP+AD were older than those in aMCI−P+AD at the first visit (median [interquartile range: IQR] = 84.0 [82.0–86.0] vs 77.5 [71.5–80.0]) and those in VLOSLP−AD at the onset age (median [IQR] = 82.0 [78.0–84.0] vs 67.0 [65.0–78.5]). CSF t-tau and p-tau scores were significantly different among the three groups (p = 0.011 and 0.003, respectively). Dunn’s post hoc analysis showed both tau scores were lower among VLOSLP−AD patients than among VLOSLP+AD and aMCI−P+AD patients (t-tau, median [IQR] = 228.0 [209.0–275.0] vs 603.0 [399.5–783.0] and 590.5 [345.0–633.0]; p-tau, median [IQR] = 47.5 [41.0–49.0] vs 77.0 [65.5–92.0] and 79.5 [64.0–83.0], respectively). CSF Aβ1-40 and Aβ1-42 concentrations and Aβ1-42/Aβ1-40 ratio were not significantly different. The proportion of APOE ϵ4 carriers was also not significantly different.

Neuropsychological tests

Table 2 summarizes the results of the neuropsychological tests. LM I, II, and weighted raw score sums for A/C of WMS-R showed significant differences (p = 0.001, 0.001, and 0.017, respectively). Dunn’s post hoc analysis revealed the following: in LM I, participants in VLOSLP−AD and VLOSLP+AD showed higher scores than those in aMCI−P+AD (median [IQR] = 12.5 [9.0–16.5] and 12.0 [9.0–18.0] vs 3.0 [2.0–6.0]); in LM II, VLOSLP−AD participants showed higher scores than aMCI−P+AD participants (median [IQR] = 10.5 [6.5–13.5] vs 0.0 [0.0–2.0]); and in weighted raw score sums for A/C, VLOSLP−AD participants showed lower scores than aMCI−P+AD participants (median [IQR] = 52.0 [41.0–55.0] vs 58.5 [58.0–61.0]). Results of the Digit-Symbol-Coding, Block Design, and Information subtests in WAIS-III were not significantly different in the three groups.

Table 2. Neuropsychological profiles

The two-tailed Kruskal–Wallis test was used, and the post hoc Dunn’s test was performed when statistically significant differences (p < 0.05) were found; statistically significant p-values are in bold. Abbreviations: AD, Alzheimer’s disease; VLOSLP, very late-onset schizophrenia-like psychosis; VLOSLP−AD, VLOSLP showing negative results for AD biomarkers; VLOSLP+AD, VLOSLP showing positive results for AD biomarkers; aMCI−P+AD, amnestic mild cognitive impairment due to AD without psychosis; IQR, interquartile range; WMS-R, Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised; A/C, Attention/Concentration; WAIS-III, Wechsler Adult Intelligence Test Third Edition.

Psychiatric symptoms

Table 3 summarizes the NPI-plus results. The VLOSLP−AD and VLOSLP+AD groups did not differ significantly in delusions and hallucinations. However, there were significant differences in disinhibition (38% in VLOSLP−AD, 22% in VLOSLP+AD, and 0% in aMCI−P+AD), irritability (50% in VLOSLP−AD, 0% in VLOSLP+AD, and 6% in aMCI−P+AD), and nighttime behaviors (75% in VLOSLP−AD, 22% in VLOSLP+AD, and 25% in aMCI−P+AD). There were no significant differences among the three groups in the other psychiatric symptoms. Table 4 describes the psychotic content elicited from VLOSLP patients on their initial visit. Four in eight and five in nine VLOSLP−AD and VLOSLP+AD patients, respectively, harbored partition delusions. Delusion of theft was shown in two in eight VLOSLP−AD patients and five in nine VLOSLP+AD patients. That someone intruded into their house and stole something was the most frequent delusion.

Table 3. Proportion of neuropsychiatric inventory-plus sub-items present

Data are presented as numbers (%). The two-tailed Fisher’s exact test was used. Statistically significant p-values (p < 0.05) are in bold. The numbers prefixed to delusions and hallucinations contents correspond to the numbers of the NPI sub-question. Abbreviations: AD, Alzheimer’s disease; VLOSLP, very late-onset schizophrenia-like psychosis; VLOSLP−AD, VLOSLP showing negative results for AD biomarkers; VLOSLP+AD, VLOSLP showing positive results for AD biomarkers; aMCI−P+AD, amnestic mild cognitive impairment due to AD without psychosis.

Table 4. Details of psychosis in every participant

*Presents case 2 and ** presents case 1 in the previous report (Satake et al., Reference Satake2021). Checkmark (✓) indicates the presence of symptoms. The numbers in the "NPI-Delusions" and "NPI-Hallucinations" rows correspond to the delusions and hallucinations sub-questions in the NPI. Abbreviations: VLOSLP, very late-onset schizophrenia-like psychosis; VLOSLP+AD, VLOSLP showing positive results for AD biomarkers; VLOSLP−AD, VLOSLP showing negative results for AD biomarkers; F, Female; M, Male; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; WMS-R, Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised; LM, Logical Memory; PD, Persecutory Delusions; VH, Visual Hallucinations; AH, Auditory Hallucinations; GD, Grandiose Delusions.

Discussion

We classified patients as AD biomarker-positive or AD biomarker-negative VLOSLP groups using amyloid PET results and CSF p-tau levels. We further characterized both groups by comparing them with patients with aMCI due to AD without psychosis. The results revealed that despite similar general cognitive abilities and sex distribution among the three groups, they had significant demographic, neuropsychological, and phenomenological differences along several characteristics.

In our cohort, several VLOSLP patients were positive for AD biomarkers. Previous pathological studies on late-onset schizophrenia and delusional disorders did not suggest the presence of an AD pathology (Casanova et al., Reference Casanova, Stevens, Brown, Royston and Bruton2002; Nagao et al., Reference Nagao2014). This difference may be due to heterogeneity in inclusion criteria [e.g. Nagao et al. excluded patients with delusions of theft (Nagao et al., Reference Nagao2014), while 7 of 17 participants with VLOSLP showed delusions of theft in our study]. Moreover, the participants also differed in age: the median age of participants in VLOSLP+AD group was 84.0 years, while the average age at death was reported as 63.3 years by Nagao et al. (Nagao et al., Reference Nagao2014) and 77.3 years by Casanova et al. (Casanova et al., Reference Casanova, Stevens, Brown, Royston and Bruton2002). Such differences may have led to the absence of AD pathology in their reports. Other longitudinal reports have suggested that some VLOSLP patients may transition to AD dementia after a few years (Brodaty et al., Reference Brodaty, Sachdev, Koschera, Monk and Cullen2003; Stafford et al., Reference Stafford, Dykxhoorn, Sommerlad, Dalman, Kirkbride and Howard2021). To our knowledge, this study is the first to show that a considerable number of VLOSLP patients may have AD pathology using AD biomarkers.

As many as nine of 17 (52.9%) VLOSLP patients in this study had AD biomarkers, perhaps because of advanced age. In the Biomarkers For Identifying Neurodegenerative Disorders Early and Reliably cohort, 24.2% of participants had subjective cognitive decline (SCD) at a mean age of 69.7 years. In the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative cohort, 25.5% of MCI cases at the mean age of 72.1 years were amyloid PET-positive (Hansson et al., Reference Hansson2018). Additionally, in European memory clinic cohorts, 46.3% and 40.4% of SCD cases with a mean age of 66.5 years were positive for Aβ 42 and p-tau, respectively, in the CSF (Wolfsgruber et al., Reference Wolfsgruber2019). Furthermore, the number of people with AD pathology increases with age up to mid-90s (Nelson et al., Reference Nelson2011). The median age of VLOSLP patients in our cohort was over 80 years; thus, it is plausible that more than 50% of them had AD pathology. However, despite the lack of significant differences in age at examination, the participants in the VLOSLP+AD group had a higher age of onset than those in the VLOSLP−AD group. This difference is difficult to attribute solely to age-dependent positivity for AD biomarkers. We have also previously reported a case in which a VLOSLP patient was positive for AD biomarkers and progressed to AD dementia over a two-year follow-up (Satake et al., Reference Satake2021). To conclude that AD pathology in VLOSLP is incidental and unrelated to psychotic symptoms would be hasty.

The MMSE and CDR scores of VLOSLP participants were similar to those of aMCI−P+AD participants. Previous studies also showed that late paraphrenia patients had poorer general cognitive function than control individuals (Naguib and Levy, Reference Naguib and Levy1987; Almeida et al., Reference Almeida, Howard, Levy, David, Morris and Sahakian1995). However, to assess differences between VLOSLP with and without a specific neuropathology, the domain-specific neuropsychological profiles must be compared. WMS-R subtests showed that patterns in memory and attention differed between patients in the VLOSLP and aMCI−P+AD groups. WMS-R LM showed that episodic memory was better in participants in the VLOSLP groups than those in the aMCI−P+AD group, and WMS-R weighted score sums for A/C showed that attention was worse in the VLOSLP participants than in the aMCI−P+AD participants. Late-onset delusional disorders patients with a mean age of 83.5 years scored better on delayed recall and recognition, including WMS-R LM II, and worse on several tests such as the digit span test than those with AD dementia without psychosis with a mean age of 79.6 years (Harris et al., Reference Harris, Kotsopoulos and Yamin2014), which is compatible with our report. On the other hand, Van Assche et al. (Reference Van Assche2019) investigated the differences among VLOSLP patients with a mean age of 79.3 years, AD dementia patients with psychosis with a mean age of 78.8 years, and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) patients with a mean age of 76.2 years; they found that VLOSLP patients were superior to AD dementia patients with psychosis in episodic memory and comparable in attention (Van Assche et al., Reference Van Assche2019). Although this difference in attention may be explained by the presence or absence of psychosis in the AD groups, other reports showed no significant differences in attention between psychotic and non-psychotic AD (Jeste et al., Reference Jeste1992; D’Antonio et al., Reference D'Antonio2019). In the study by Harris et al. and our study, VLOSLP patients were older than AD patients, unlike in the report by van Assche et al. Such age differences could have also led to the differences in attention scores.

The comparison of episodic memory among the three groups clarified the neuropsychological differences between the VLOSLP−AD and VLOSLP+AD groups. On the WMS-R LM I, VLOSLP+AD participants scored close to VLOSLP−AD participants and significantly higher than aMCI−P+AD participants. However, on the WMS-R LM II, VLOSLP+AD participants scored worse, and their scores were not significantly different from those of aMCI−P+AD participants. Mean scores (SD) on the Japanese versions of the WMS-R LM I and LM II were reported to be 15.5 (6.4) and 9.9 (6.6) in normative Japanese individuals aged 75 years or older with a mean age of 79.3 years (Kawano et al., Reference Kawano, Awata, Ijuin, Iwamoto and Ozaki2013). Therefore, it is possible that VLOSLP−AD participants showed little memory impairment, while VLOSLP+AD participants showed mild episodic memory impairment. De Simone et al. reported that greater attenuation from immediate recall to delayed recall in a story recall test predicted the progression from aMCI to AD dementia (De Simone et al., Reference De Simone2017). The pattern of WMS-R LM in VLOSLP+AD participants agrees with the findings in aMCI destined to convert to AD dementia. It has also been reported that even in people with normal cognitive function, episodic memory is worse in those with AD-related pathology than in those without (Malek-Ahmadi et al., Reference Malek-Ahmadi, Perez, Chen and Mufson2016). Considering these previous reports, the WMS-R results in this study indicated that VLOSLP+AD participants had episodic memory impairment attributed to AD pathology.

The difference in age of onset between the VLOSLP+AD and −AD groups is that the +AD group had a shorter time between onset and the initial visit. VLOSLP patients generally have few negative symptoms and maintain cognitive function, which delays their consultation at the clinics (Roth and Kay, Reference Roth and Kay1998). The pathophysiology of AD may hasten their consultation at a memory clinic through subtle functional changes related to neurodegeneration. Our findings are consistent with the results of a previous study that revealed the dementia hazard ratio associated with VLOSLP was the highest in the first year after VLOSLP diagnosis, although rates of dementia remained higher in the VLOSLP group than in the control group for up to 20 years of follow-up (Stafford et al., Reference Stafford, Dykxhoorn, Sommerlad, Dalman, Kirkbride and Howard2021).

In the psychiatric symptoms assessed by NPI-plus, the presence of disinhibition, irritability, and nighttime behaviors was the most frequent in VLOSLP−AD among the three groups. Although there is insufficient literature about psychiatric symptoms other than psychosis and negative symptoms in VLOSLP, emotional dysregulation, impulsivity, and sleep disturbances have often been emphasized in the schizophrenia spectrum disorders (Cohrs, Reference Cohrs2008; Freeman et al., Reference Freeman, Pugh, Vorontsova and Southgate2009; Hoptman, Reference Hoptman2015; Joseph and Siddiqui, Reference Joseph and Siddiqui2022). Irritability, disinhibition, and sleep disturbances are also frequent in MCI and neurodegenerative diseases (Apostolova et al., Reference Apostolova2014; Guarnieri et al., Reference Guarnieri2012). Among those diseases, irritability was reported to be a frequent initial symptom in argyrophilic grain disease (Togo et al., Reference Togo2005), and sleep disturbances were more common in MCI with Lewy bodies than in MCI due to AD (Donaghy et al., Reference Donaghy2020). The higher prevalence of these symptoms in VLOSLP−AD may be explained as psychiatric symptoms of psychotic disorders and potential comorbidities of neurodegenerative diseases other than AD.

The VLOSLP+AD and −AD groups did not differ significantly on the sub-questions of delusions and hallucinations in the NPI-plus; persecutory delusions were frequent in both VLOSLP groups, consistent with previous reports (Kay and Roth, Reference Kay and Roth1961). Delusions of theft were more frequent in VLOSLP+AD than in VLOSLP−AD, although the difference was not significant. On the other hand, as shown in Table 4, all seven patients in both groups with delusion of theft scored lower than 10 on the WMS-R LM II, and all five patients in both groups with scores higher than 10 in the task did not show delusions related to theft. Although AD frequently accompanies delusions of theft (Ropacki and Jeste, Reference Ropacki and Jeste2005), patients with probable AD dementia and delusions of theft show more severe episodic memory impairment than those without similar delusions (Na et al., Reference Na, Kang, Woo, Bahk, Lee and Lim2018). Therefore, our results indicate that delusions of theft in VLOSLP may be associated with episodic memory impairment with or without AD pathology. They also suggest that delusions of theft may tend to be more prevalent in VLOSLP patients with AD pathology because of worse memory impairment than in those without AD pathology.

Regarding misidentification delusions, one patient with VLOSLP−AD and three patients with VLOSLP+AD were evaluated as having phantom border symptom in the NPI-plus. Fisher et al. reported those delusions to be more dementia-related delusions than persecutory delusions (Fischer et al., Reference Fischer2020). However, all of the phantom border delusions scored in NPI in the present study were associated with partition delusion that "someone intruded into the house," and these delusions were considered to be mainly persecutory delusions rather than misidentification delusions, and were not necessarily of a quality that would lead to suspicion of dementia. The proportions of the participants harboring persecutory delusions and partition delusions were 87.5% and 50% in VLOSLP−AD, and 88.9% and 55.6% in VLOSLP+AD, respectively. The overall similarity in the content of psychotic symptoms between VLOSLP−AD and +AD made it difficult to predict the AD biomarker results on their own. However, given the small sample size and the lack of uniformity in the assessment of psychosis, it is not possible to determine from these results alone whether AD biomarker-positive and AD biomarker-negative VLOSLP psychosis are truly similar. Future evaluation of semi-structured psychosis with a larger sample may reveal features that may be useful in differentiating between the two.

The present study proposes that AD pathology may be directly involved in the emergence of psychosis in VLOSLP with AD pathology. However, we think it is challenging to attribute the psychosis solely to AD pathology. Recent pathological studies have shown that in people older than 80 years, individuals with AD pathology often have other neurodegenerative changes and vascular diseases (Beach and Malek-Ahmadi, Reference Beach and Malek-Ahmadi2021; Yu et al., Reference Yu, Boyle, Dawe, Bennett, Arfanakis and Schneider2020); even in older VLOSLP patients with AD pathology, the influence of these age-related co-pathologies may not be ignored. We previously reported that there is a certain number of VLOSLP patients with positive results for indicative biomarkers of DLB (Kanemoto et al., Reference Kanemoto2022). Therefore, VLOSLP+AD patients in this study also might have Lewy body disease pathology. However, the involvement of a concurrent AD pathology in the pathogenesis of VLOSLP should be considered. With regard to pharmacotherapy, the usefulness of antipsychotic drugs for VLOSLP was already demonstrated (Howard et al., Reference Howard2018; Scott et al., Reference Scott, Greenwald, Kramer and Shuwall2011). However, such uses of antipsychotics could be tailored to the specific neuropathology the patient has. In the future, new drugs, especially disease-modifying ones, may be candidates for the treatment of VLOSLP with specific neuropathologies. Further clarification of the link between neuropathology and VLOSLP would be helpful for the treatment of VLOSLP.

Limitation

Apart from the small number of participants, there are several limitations. First, selection bias in this study cannot be overlooked. Although we attempted to generalize the results of this study to general VLOSLP, two substantial biases existed: the implementation of testing for AD biomarkers and the fact that participants visited our neuropsychology clinic. AD biomarker testing was performed for research and clinical necessity. AD biomarkers are of greater value for assessing neuropathology in younger patients (Ossenkoppele et al., Reference Ossenkoppele2015). Therefore, we may have tended to perform AD biomarker testing in relatively young MCI patients without psychosis, with a view to drug trials and future clinical use of disease-modifying drugs. In contrast, our use of AD biomarker testing for VLOSLP patients was not subject to age of onset bias. The differences in the selection criteria for testing might have led having older participants in the VLOSLP groups than in the aMCI−P+AD group. With regard to patient visit bias, patients who visited our neuropsychology clinic likely presented with more cognitive decline than the general VLOSLP population, as VLOSLP patients often do not voluntarily visit memory or psychiatric clinics owing to preserved function and lack of insight (Lam et al., Reference Lam, Reeves, Stewart and Howard2016). However, many VLOSLP patients in this study were referred from community psychiatric clinics and outreach teams organized by psychiatrists for the differential diagnosis of mild dementia with psychosis and VLOSLP. Second, the AD biomarkers we used may not reflect pathology perfectly. However, 18F-Florbetapir PET is a reliable tracer for AD and is predictive even of early-stage disease (Clark et al., Reference Clark2011; Palmqvist et al., Reference Palmqvist2015); CSF p-tau is also reliable in detecting early-stage AD (Mattsson et al., Reference Mattsson2017). Furthermore, the CSF t-tau, Aβ1-42 and Aβ1-42/1-40 scores of participants in VLOSLP and aMCI groups were compatible with the presumed pathologies (Blennow and Zetterberg, Reference Blennow and Zetterberg2018; Hansson et al., Reference Hansson, Lehmann, Otto, Zetterberg and Lewczuk2019; Mattsson et al., Reference Mattsson2009). Third, we had several statistical limitations. Although many statistical comparisons were conducted, we did not conduct statistical correction for multiple comparisons. We focused on avoiding the risk of a β-error rather than α-error in this small sample size exploratory study. Note that when the Benjamini-Hochberg procedure was performed to evaluate the false discovery rate in each table, only WMS-R LM1, 2 and the weighted raw score sums of A/C were considered significant, and these differences were considered relatively robust. In addition, due to the small sample size, it was not possible to perform a multivariate analysis. Fourth, as mentioned previously in the discussion, we did not control confounders for psychosis (e.g. physical disorders, financial backgrounds, recent impactful events, sensory impairments, and medications). They were difficult to regulate due to lack of data. Finally, some VLOSLP patients had cognitive impairment that could be considered MCI. Our classification for VLOSLP could have included a group with MCI and psychosis. However, VLOSLP patients performed better on the episodic memory test than aMCI−P+AD patients, while they performed worse on the attention test. This suggests that while a small percentage of the VLOSLP patients in this study met the criteria for MCI, they remained distinct from the MCI patients. Future longitudinal studies with a larger sample size and more detailed assessment of psychotic symptoms that address many of the limitations of this study are needed.

Conclusions

Our findings suggest that VLOSLP is a prodromal feature of dementia or that VLOSLP independently confers risk for later dementia via other mechanisms (Stafford et al., Reference Stafford, Dykxhoorn, Sommerlad, Dalman, Kirkbride and Howard2021). A number of VLOSLP patients had AD pathology in our retrospective cohort. The VLOSLP patients who tested positive for AD biomarkers were older at onset than those who tested negative. Episodic memory impairment in AD biomarker-positive VLOSLP was intermediate between aMCI due to AD without psychosis and AD biomarker-negative VLOSLP. The prevalence of psychiatric symptoms such as disinhibition, irritability, and nighttime behaviors differed between VLOSLP with positive and negative AD biomarkers and aMCI due to AD without psychosis. These clinical differences may be helpful for estimating the pathology of VLOSLP.

Conflict of interest

None.

Description of authors’ roles

YS and HK designed the study. YS wrote the initial draft of the manuscript. HK, KMa, ES, KMo, TM, KY, and MI contributed to the interpretation of data and assisted in the preparation of the manuscript. DT, TS, FK, SS, SG, and TW contributed to data collection and interpretation and reviewed the article. All authors approved the article and agreed to be accountable for all aspects of the work.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank all members of the Neuropsychology and Neurochemistry Laboratory, Department of Psychiatry, Osaka University, for their helpful input regarding the data in this report and Editage (www.editage.com) for English language editing. This research was supported by JSPS KAKENHI Grant Number T21K157300 and 20H03602, AMED Grant Number JP21dk0207056, JP21de0107001 and JP21ek0109510h0001, and JST FOREST program JPMJFR200Z. SG is supported by a JSPS Research Fellowship for Young Scientists (DC).

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Figure 0

Figure 1. Enrollment flowchart. Abbreviation: NPI-plus, Neuropsychiatric inventory-plus; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating; aMCI, amnestic mild cognitive impairment; VLOSLP, very late-onset schizophrenia-like psychosis; AD, Alzheimer’s disease.

Figure 1

Table 1. Demographic characteristics, CSF tau and Aβ concentration, and results of APOE genotyping

Figure 2

Table 2. Neuropsychological profiles

Figure 3

Table 3. Proportion of neuropsychiatric inventory-plus sub-items present

Figure 4

Table 4. Details of psychosis in every participant