Publications by authors named "Frisoni G"

Parkinson's disease with dementia (PDD) and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) are more prevalent in males than females. Furthermore, they typically showed abnormally high delta (< 4 Hz) and low alpha (8-10 Hz) rhythms from resting-state electroencephalographic (rsEEG) activity. Here, we hypothesized that those abnormalities may depend on the patient's sex.

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Purpose: As dual-phase amyloid-PET can evaluate amyloid (A) and neurodegeneration (N) with a single tracer injection, dual-phase tau-PET might be able to provide both tau (T) and N. Our study aims to assess the association of early-phase tau-PET scans and F-fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) PET and their comparability in discriminating Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients and differentiating neurodegenerative patterns.

Methods: 58 subjects evaluated at the Geneva Memory Center underwent dual-phase F-Flortaucipir-PET with early-phase acquisition (eTAU) and F-FDG-PET within 1 year.

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Importance: Depressive symptoms are associated with cognitive decline in older individuals. Uncertainty about underlying mechanisms hampers diagnostic and therapeutic efforts. This large-scale study aimed to elucidate the association between depressive symptoms and amyloid pathology.

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Human microbiota-associated murine models, using fecal microbiota transplantation (FMT) from human donors, help explore the microbiome's role in diseases like Alzheimer's disease (AD). This study examines how gut bacteria from donors with protective factors against AD influence behavior and brain pathology in an AD mouse model. Female 3xTgAD mice received weekly FMT for 2 months from (i) an 80-year-old AD patient (AD-FMT), (ii) a cognitively healthy 73-year-old with the protective APOEe2 allele (APOEe2-FMT), (iii) a 22-year-old healthy donor (Young-FMT), and (iv) untreated mice (Mice-FMT).

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Patients with mild cognitive impairment due to Alzheimer's disease (ADMCI) typically show abnormally high delta (<4 Hz) and low alpha (8-12 Hz) rhythms measured from resting-state eyes-closed electroencephalographic (rsEEG) activity. Here, we hypothesized that the abnormalities in rsEEG activity may be greater in ADMCI patients than in those with MCI not due to AD (noADMCI). Furthermore, they may be associated with the diagnostic cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) amyloid-tau biomarkers in ADMCI patients.

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Article Synopsis
  • A new visual rating scale for assessing amygdalar atrophy on MRI was developed, addressing a gap in evaluating conditions like limbic predominant age-related TDP-43 encephalopathy (LATE).
  • The scale demonstrated high reliability among neuroradiologists, with substantial to almost perfect agreement in ratings, and strong correlations with amygdalar volumes measured by an established imaging software.
  • This scale offers a validated tool that can enhance routine radiological assessments of neurodegenerative diseases.
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The possible authorisation of new monoclonal antibody therapies for Alzheimer's disease poses challenges for healthcare systems worldwide. In this paper, the Swiss Memory Clinics association (SMC) analyses the available resources and identifies potential health care shortages. Overcoming potential bottlenecks is a challenge that requires action at various levels.

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Article Synopsis
  • Dementia, particularly with severe behavioral and psychological symptoms (BPSD), greatly affects quality of life and is a main cause of death in older adults; this study looked at factors predicting mortality in these patients.
  • Over 4 years, 32.5% of 508 participants with severe BPSD died, with non-survivors generally being older, more likely male, and showing greater symptom severity and lower cognitive and functional capabilities at the start.
  • Key mortality predictors identified were male sex, older age at diagnosis, higher BPSD severity scores, lower cognitive function, worse daily living capabilities, and lower quality of life, while the use of antidepressants was linked to a reduced mortality risk.
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Objectives: We investigated tau and neurodegeneration patterns and clinical phenotypes in carriers of a specific pathogenic variant in the PSEN1 gene and 1 nonaffected relative.

Methods: We included 3 symptomatic carriers of the c.436 A>C, p.

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Treating cognitive impairment is a holy grail of modern clinical neuroscience. In the past few years, non-invasive brain stimulation is increasingly emerging as a therapeutic approach to ameliorate performance in patients with cognitive impairment and as an augmentation approach in persons whose cognitive performance is within normal limits. In patients with Alzheimer's disease, better understanding of brain connectivity and function has allowed for the development of different non-invasive brain stimulation protocols.

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Several studies have demonstrated strong agreement between routine clinical visual assessment and quantification, suggesting that quantification approaches could support assessment by less experienced readers or in challenging cases. However, all studies to date have implemented a retrospective case collection, and challenging cases were generally underrepresented. We included all participants ( = 741) from the AMYPAD diagnostic and patient management study with available baseline amyloid PET quantification.

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Background: Developing interventions for older adults with subjective cognitive decline (SCD) has the potential to prevent dementia in this at-risk group. Preclinical models indicate that Citrus-derived phytochemicals could benefit cognition and inflammatory processes, but results from clinical trials are still preliminary. The aim of this study is to determine the effects of long-term supplementation with Citrus peel extract on cognitive performance and inflammation in individuals with SCD.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Concerns are raised about purely biological definitions being used in clinical settings, especially since many biomarker-positive but cognitively normal individuals may never develop symptoms, complicating diagnosis and patient understanding.
  • * The authors advocate for a combined clinical-biological definition of AD that accommodates at-risk and presymptomatic stages, emphasizing the need for caution in diagnosing AD without fully understanding the implications for patients.
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β-amyloid-targeting antibodies represent the first generation of effective causal treatment of Alzheimer's disease (AD) and can be considered historical research milestones. Their effect sizes, side effects, implementation challenges and costs, however, have stimulated debates about their overall value. In this position statement academic clinicians of the European Alzheimer's Disease Consortium (EADC) discuss the critical relevance of introducing these new treatments in clinical care now.

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Resting-state functional connectivity (FC) MRI is sensitive to brain changes in Alzheimer's disease in preclinical stages, however studies in persons with subjective cognitive decline (SCD) have reported conflicting findings, and no study is available at 7T MRI. In this study, we investigated FC alterations in sixty-six participants recruited at the Geneva Memory Center (24 controls, 14 SCD, 28 cognitively impaired [CI]). Participants were classified as SCD if they reported cognitive complaints without objective cognitive deficits, and underwent 7T fMRI to assess FC in canonical brain networks and their association with cognitive/clinical features.

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Functional connectivity patterns in the human brain, like the friction ridges of a fingerprint, can uniquely identify individuals. Does this "brain fingerprint" remain distinct even during Alzheimer's disease (AD)? Using fMRI data from healthy and pathologically ageing subjects, we find that individual functional connectivity profiles remain unique and highly heterogeneous during mild cognitive impairment and AD. However, the patterns that make individuals identifiable change with disease progression, revealing a reconfiguration of the brain fingerprint.

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Background And Objectives: Vascular risk factors (VRFs) and cerebral small vessel disease (cSVD) are common in patients with Alzheimer disease (AD). It remains unclear whether this coexistence reflects shared risk factors or a mechanistic relationship and whether vascular and amyloid pathologies have independent or synergistic influence on subsequent AD pathophysiology in preclinical stages. We investigated links between VRFs, cSVD, and amyloid levels (Aβ) and their combined effect on downstream AD biomarkers, that is, CSF hyperphosphorylated tau (P-tau), atrophy, and cognition.

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Article Synopsis
  • Blood-derived DNA methylation shows potential for early detection of dementia risk, linking biological factors with lifestyle and environmental influences.
  • A multivariate methylation risk score (MMRS) was developed, predicting mild cognitive impairment independently of age and sex, alongside significant future risk of cognitive decline in Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases.
  • The study highlights the integration of machine learning and omics data to enhance dementia risk prediction at the population level.
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  • The study examined DNA methylation patterns in blood samples related to 15 key biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease, focusing on neuroinflammation and neurodegeneration effects.
  • Using 885 samples from the EMIF-AD study, researchers identified significant differential methylation connected to CSF levels of YKL-40 and neurofilament light chain (NfL).
  • Findings suggest a link between YKL-40 DNA methylation and genetic variants, with implications for understanding how DNA methylation influences protein levels relevant to Alzheimer's disease.
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  • The study explores the genetic risk factors for Alzheimer's disease (AD) and their connection to various brain changes, aiming to enhance precision medicine strategies.
  • Researchers calculated specific genetic risk scores in healthy individuals to see how these scores correlate with AD-related biomarkers found in cerebrospinal fluid and imaging techniques.
  • Findings show that different genetic pathways link to distinct brain conditions, such as inflammation affecting vascular health and other pathways influencing white matter and brain connectivity, highlighting the complexity of AD and its potential for personalized treatment approaches.
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Cognitive complaints are common in elderly subjects and are a frequent reason for referral to memory clinics. If the complaints are not associated with objective cognitive impairment, the condition is labelled subjective cognitive decline (SCD). SCD is often considered as a stage antedating objective impairment, and an at-risk condition for subsequent dementia.

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Introduction: Assessing the potential sources of bias and variability of the Centiloid (CL) scale is fundamental for its appropriate clinical application.

Methods: We included 533 participants from AMYloid imaging to Prevent Alzheimer's Disease (AMYPAD DPMS) and Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) cohorts. Thirty-two CL pipelines were created using different combinations of reference region (RR), RR and target types, and quantification spaces.

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Increasing evidence shows that neuroinflammation is a possible modulator of tau spread effects on cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's disease. In this context, plasma levels of the glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) have been suggested to have a robust association with Alzheimer's disease pathophysiology. This study aims to assess the correlation between plasma GFAP and Alzheimer's disease pathology, and their synergistic effect on cognitive performance and decline.

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