Different Clinical Outcomes between Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy-Related Inflammation and Non-Inflammatory Form.

Archive ouverte

Grangeon, Lou | Quesney, Gerald | Verdalle-Cazes, Mikael | Coulette, Sarah | Renard, Dimitri | Wacongne, Anne | Allou, Thibaut | Olivier, Nadège | Boukriche, Yassine | Blanchet-Fourcade, Geneviève | Labauge, Pierre | Arquizan, Caroline | Canaple, Sandrine | Godefroy, Olivier | Martinaud, Olivier | Verdure, Pierre | Quillard-Muraine, Muriel | Pariente, Jérémie | Magnin, Eloi | Nicolas, Gaël | Charbonnier, Colette | Maltête, David | Formaglio, Maïté | Raposo, Nicolas | Ayrignac, Xavier | Wallon, David

Edité par CCSD ; Springer Verlag -

International audience. OBJECTIVE: Cerebral amyloid angiopathy-related inflammation (CAA-ri) is a rare manifestation related to CAA, thought to be more severe. We aimed to compare the clinical and radiological outcomes of CAA-ri and non-inflammatory CAA. MATERIALS AND METHODS: We retrospectively included all patients with CAA-ri from 13 French centers. We constituted a sex- and age-matched control cohort with non-inflammatory CAA and similar disease duration. Survival, autonomy and cognitive evolution were compared after logistic regression. Cerebral microbleeds (CMB), intracerebral hemorrhage, cortical superficial siderosis and hippocampal atrophy were analyzed as well as CSF biomarker profile and APOE genotype when available. Outcomes were compared using Kaplan-Meier curves and log-rank tests. RESULTS: Data from 48 CAA-ri patients including 28 already reported and 20 new patients were analyzed. Over a mean of 3.1~years, 11 patients died (22.9%) and 18 (37.5%) relapsed. CAA-ri patients were more frequently institutionalized than non-inflammatory CAA patients (30% vs 8.3%, p\,<\,0.001); mortality rates remained similar. MMSE and modified Rankin scale scores showed greater severity in CAA-ri at last follow-up. MRI showed a higher number of CMB at baseline and last follow-up in CAA-ri (p\,<\,0.001 and p\,=\,0.004, respectively). CSF showed lower baseline levels of A\ss 42 in CAA-ri than non-inflammatory CAA (373.3~pg/ml vs 490.8~pg/ml, p\,=\,0.05). CAA-ri patients more likely carried at least one APOE \epsilon4 allele (76% vs 37.5%, adjusted p\,=\,0.05) particularly as homozygous status (56% vs 6.2%, p\,<\,0.001). INTERPRETATION: CAA-ri appears to be more severe than non-inflammatory CAA with a significant loss of autonomy and global higher amyloid burden, shown by more CMB and a distinct CSF profile. This burden may be partially promoted by \epsilon4 allele.

Consulter en ligne

Suggestions

Du même auteur

Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy-Related Inflammation and Biopsy-Positive Primary Angiitis of the CNS: A Comparative Study.

Archive ouverte | Grangeon, Lou | CCSD

International audience. Background and ObjectivesCerebral amyloid angiopathy-related inflammation (CAA-RI) and biopsy-positive primary angiitis of the CNS (BP-PACNS) have overlapping clinicoradiologic presentations....

A Clinico-Radiological Study of Cerebral Amyloid Angiopathy-Related Inflammation

Archive ouverte | Coulette, Sarah | CCSD

International audience. OBJECTIVE:To describe the clinico-radiological features and long-term prognosis in patients with cerebral amyloid angiopathy-related inflammation (CAA-ri).METHODS:Twenty-eight CAA-ri patients...

SORL1 rare variants: a major risk factor for familial early-onset Alzheimer’s disease

Archive ouverte | Nicolas, Gaël | CCSD

International audience. The SORL1 protein plays a protective role against the secretion of the amyloid β peptide, a key event in the pathogeny of Alzheimer's disease. We assessed the impact of SORL1 rare variants in...

Chargement des enrichissements...