Journal of Alzheimer's Disease
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Home > Combination of Structural MRI and FDG-PET of the Brain Improves Diagnostic Accuracy in Newly Manifested Cognitive Impairment in Geriatric Inpatients.

TitleCombination of Structural MRI and FDG-PET of the Brain Improves Diagnostic Accuracy in Newly Manifested Cognitive Impairment in Geriatric Inpatients.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2016
AuthorsRitter, K, Lange, C, Weygandt, M, Mäurer, A, Roberts, A, Estrella, M, Suppa, P, Spies, L, Prasad, V, Steffen, I, Apostolova, I, Bittner, D, Gövercin, M, Brenner, W, Mende, C, Peters, O, Seybold, J, Fiebach, JB, Steinhagen-Thiessen, E, Hampel, H, Haynes, J-D, Buchert, R
JournalJ Alzheimers Dis
Volume54
Issue4
Pagination1319-1331
Date Published2016 Oct 18
ISSN1875-8908
Abstract

BACKGROUND: The cause of cognitive impairment in acutely hospitalized geriatric patients is often unclear. The diagnostic process is challenging but important in order to treat potentially life-threatening etiologies or identify underlying neurodegenerative disease.

OBJECTIVE: To evaluate the add-on diagnostic value of structural and metabolic neuroimaging in newly manifested cognitive impairment in elderly geriatric inpatients.

METHODS: Eighty-one inpatients (55 females, 81.6±5.5 y) without history of cognitive complaints prior to hospitalization were recruited in 10 acute geriatrics clinics. Primary inclusion criterion was a clinical hypothesis of Alzheimer's disease (AD), cerebrovascular disease (CVD), or mixed AD+CVD etiology (MD), which remained uncertain after standard diagnostic workup. Additional procedures performed after enrollment included detailed neuropsychological testing and structural MRI and FDG-PET of the brain. An interdisciplinary expert team established the most probable etiologic diagnosis (non-neurodegenerative, AD, CVD, or MD) integrating all available data. Automatic multimodal classification based on Random Undersampling Boosting was used for rater-independent assessment of the complementary contribution of the additional diagnostic procedures to the etiologic diagnosis.

RESULTS: Automatic 4-class classification based on all diagnostic routine standard procedures combined reproduced the etiologic expert diagnosis in 31% of the patients (p = 0.100, chance level 25%). Highest accuracy by a single modality was achieved by MRI or FDG-PET (both 45%, p≤0.001). Integration of all modalities resulted in 76% accuracy (p≤0.001).

CONCLUSION: These results indicate substantial improvement of diagnostic accuracy in uncertain de novo cognitive impairment in acutely hospitalized geriatric patients with the integration of structural MRI and brain FDG-PET into the diagnostic process.

DOI10.3233/JAD-160380
Alternate JournalJ. Alzheimers Dis.
PubMed ID27567842
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Source URL: https://www.j-alz.com/content/combination-structural-mri-and%C2%A0fdg-pet-brain-improves-diagnostic-accuracy-newly-manifested