Cortical atrophy and amyloid and tau deposition in Down syndrome: A longitudinal study

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Abstract

Introduction: The Down syndrome population has a high prevalence for dementia, often showing their first clinical symptoms in their 40s. Methods: In a longitudinal cohort, we investigate whether amyloid deposition at time point 1 (TP1) could predict cortical thickness change at time point 2 (TP2). The association between tau burden and cortical thickness was also examined at time point 3 (TP3). Results: Between TP1 and TP2 there was pronounced cortical thinning in temporo-parietal cortices and cortical thickening in the frontal cortex. Baseline amyloid burden was strongly associated to cortical thinning progression, especially in the temporo-parietal regions. At TP3, tau deposition negatively correlated with cortical atrophy in regions where tau usually accumulates at later Braak stages. Discussion: A higher amount of amyloid accumulation triggers a cascade of changes of disease-causing processes that eventually lead to dementia. As expected, we found that regions where tau usually accumulates were those also displaying high levels of cortical atrophy.

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Padilla, C., Montal, V., Walpert, M. J., Hong, Y. T., Fryer, T. D., Coles, J. P., … Zaman, S. H. (2022). Cortical atrophy and amyloid and tau deposition in Down syndrome: A longitudinal study. Alzheimer’s and Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment and Disease Monitoring, 14(1). https://doi.org/10.1002/dad2.12288

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