Clinical relevance of acute cerebral microinfarcts in vascular cognitive impairment
Publication date
2019-04-02
Authors
TRACE-VCI study group
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Advisors
Supervisors
Document Type
Article
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taverne
Abstract
ObjectiveTo determine the occurrence of acute cerebral microinfarcts (ACMIs) in memory clinic patients and relate their presence to vascular risk and cognitive profile, CSF and neuroimaging markers, and clinical outcome.MethodsThe TRACE-VCI study is a memory clinic cohort of patients with vascular brain injury on MRI (i.e., possible vascular cognitive impairment [VCI]). We included 783 patients (mean age 67.6 ± 8.5, 46% female) with available 3T diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI). ACMIs were defined as supratentorial DWI hyperintensities <5 mm with a corresponding hypo/isointense apparent diffusion coefficient signal and iso/hyperintense T2-weighted signal.ResultsA total of 23 ACMIs were found in 16 of the 783 patients (2.0%). Patients with ACMIs did not differ in vascular risk or cognitive profile, but were more often diagnosed with vascular dementia (odds ratio [OR] 5.1; 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.4-18.9, p = 0.014). ACMI presence was associated with lower levels of β-amyloid (p < 0.004) and with vascular imaging markers (lacunar infarcts: OR 3.5, CI 1.3-9.6, p = 0.015; nonlacunar infarcts: OR 4.1, CI 1.4-12.5, p = 0.012; severe white matter hyperintensities: OR 4.8, CI 1.7-13.8, p = 0.004; microbleeds: OR 18.9, CI 2.5-144.0, p = 0.0001). After a median follow-up of 2.1 years, the risk of poor clinical outcome (composite of marked cognitive decline, major vascular event, death, and institutionalization) was increased among patients with ACMIs (hazard ratio 3.0; 1.4-6.0, p = 0.005).ConclusionIn patients with possible VCI, ACMI presence was associated with a high burden of cerebrovascular disease of both small and large vessel etiology and poor clinical outcome. ACMIs may thus be a novel marker of active vascular brain injury in these patients.
Keywords
Acute Disease, Aged, Cerebral Infarction/complications, Cognitive Dysfunction/complications, Dementia, Vascular/complications, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Proportional Hazards Models, Stroke, Lacunar, Taverne, Clinical Neurology, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
Citation
TRACE-VCI study group 2019, 'Clinical relevance of acute cerebral microinfarcts in vascular cognitive impairment', Neurology, vol. 92, no. 14, pp. E1558-E1566. https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000007250