Cerebral Metabolic Signature of Chronic Benzodiazepine Use in Nondemented Older Adults: An FDG-PET Study in the MEMENTO Cohort

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Gallet, Quentin | Bouteloup, Vincent | Locatelli, Maxime | Habert, Marie-Odile | Chupin, Marie | Campion, Jacques-Yves | Michels, Pierre-Emmanuel | Delrieu, Julien | Lebouvier, Thibaud | Balageas, Anna-Chloe | Surget, Alexandre | Belzung, Catherine | Arlicot, Nicolas | Ribeiro, Maria-Joao Santiago | Gissot, Valerie | El-Hage, Wissam | Camus, Vincent | Gohier, Benedicte | Desmidt, Thomas | Group, Memento Study

Edité par CCSD ; Elsevier -

International audience. OBJECTIVE: We sought to examine the association between chronic Benzodiazepine (BZD) use and brain metabolism obtained from 2-deoxy-2-fluoro-D-glucose (FDG) positron emission tomography (PET) in the MEMENTO clinical cohort of nondemented older adults with an isolated memory complaint or mild cognitive impairment at baseline. METHODS: Our analysis focused on 3 levels: (1) the global mean brain standardized uptake value (SUVR), (2) the Alzheimer's disease (AD)-specific regions of interest (ROIs), and (3) the ratio of total SUVR on the brain and different anatomical ROIs. Cerebral metabolism was obtained from 2-deoxy-2-fluoro-D-glucose-FDG-PET and compared between chronic BZD users and nonusers using multiple linear regressions adjusted for age, sex, education, APOE ε 4 copy number, cognitive and neuropsychiatric assessments, history of major depressive episodes and antidepressant use. RESULTS: We found that the SUVR was significantly higher in chronic BZD users (n = 192) than in nonusers (n = 1,122) in the whole brain (beta = 0.03; p = 0.038) and in the right amygdala (beta = 0.32; p = 0.012). Trends were observed for the half-lives of BZDs (short- and long-acting BZDs) (p = 0.051) and Z-drug hypnotic treatments (p = 0.060) on the SUVR of the right amygdala. We found no significant association in the other ROIs. CONCLUSION: Our study is the first to find a greater global metabolism in chronic BZD users and a specific greater metabolism in the right amygdala. Because the acute administration of BZDs tends to reduce brain metabolism, these findings may correspond to a compensatory mechanism while the brain adapts with global metabolism upregulation, with a specific focus on the right amygdala.

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