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Home > Application of the IWG-2 Diagnostic Criteria for Alzheimer's Disease to the ADNI.

TitleApplication of the IWG-2 Diagnostic Criteria for Alzheimer's Disease to the ADNI.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsWang, H-F, Tan, L, Cao, L, Zhu, X-C, Jiang, T, Tan, M-S, Liu, Y, Wang, C, Tsai, RM, Jia, J-P, Yu, J-T
Corporate AuthorsAlzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative
JournalJ Alzheimers Dis
Volume51
Issue1
Pagination227-36
Date Published2016
ISSN1875-8908
KeywordsAged, Aged, 80 and over, Alzheimer Disease, Amyloid Precursor Protein Secretases, Aspartic Acid Endopeptidases, Cognitive Dysfunction, Databases, Factual, Disease Progression, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Multicenter Studies as Topic, Neuroimaging, Psychiatric Status Rating Scales, tau Proteins
Abstract

BACKGROUND: The International Working Group (IWG) recently proposed the revised diagnostic criteria for Alzheimer's disease (AD) to define and refine several types of AD, and to reclassify AD-related biomarkers into diagnostic and progression markers, but its performance is not known.

OBJECTIVE: This study was designed to describe the application of the revised IWG criteria in the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) dataset, and to ascertain whether diagnostic and progression markers show significant differences in their relationships to AD severity and progression.

METHODS: Based on the requirements of the refined criteria, 857 ADNI subjects with memory evaluation and at least one pathophysiological marker (CSF or amyloid imaging biomarkers) were eligible and reclassified in this study, and we calculated the associations of diagnostic (CSF and amyloid PET) and progression markers (MRI and fluorodeoxyglucose-PET) with AD severity and progression respectively.

RESULTS: The majority (84.2% ) of ADNI AD group (n = 117) and 173 MCI (37.4% ) subjects in ADNI met the definition of typical AD; and 105 cognitively normal (41.0% ) individuals were diagnosed as asymptomatic AD. Furthermore, diagnostic and progression markers showed significant differences when correlated to AD severity and progression.

CONCLUSION: A large proportion of AD dementia subjects were categorized as typical AD, and the revised criteria could identify typical AD from MCI status as well as asymptomatic AD at the asymptomatic stage. Moreover, the significant differences between diagnostic and progression markers further supported the new biomarkers categorization in the refined criteria.

DOI10.3233/JAD-150824
Alternate JournalJ. Alzheimers Dis.
PubMed ID26836176
Grant ListU01 AG024904 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States
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Source URL: https://www.j-alz.com/content/application-iwg-2-diagnostic-criteria-alzheimers-disease-adni