Cerebral amyloid-β deposition in patients with heart disease or carotid occlusive disease: A systematic review and meta-analysis

Publication date

2023-02-15

Authors

Starmans, Naomi
Leeuwis, Anna Elisabeth
Biessels, Geert JanISNI 0000000117928938
Kappelle, Laurens Jaap
van der Flier, Wiesje Maria
Tolboom, NORCID 0000-0002-8005-2833

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Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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cc_by

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cardiovascular disease is an important contributor to cognitive impairment. This likely involves prototypical vascular disease mechanisms like ischemia, but cardiovascular disease might also impact the brain by accelerating cerebral amyloid-β accumulation. We aimed to determine whether there is an association between heart disease or carotid occlusive disease (COD) and cerebral amyloid-β burden. METHODS: We conducted a systematic review of studies investigating cerebral amyloid-β burden, measured with positron emission tomography, in adults with and without heart disease or COD. Where possible, we obtained standardized mean differences (SMD) of amyloid-β standardized uptake volume ratios (SUVr) for meta-analysis. RESULTS: Eight cross-sectional studies were identified (1478 participants, aged 60-81 years, 51% female). Three studies on heart disease (two on atrial fibrillation (AF) only, one on AF, coronary artery disease and heart failure) did not find a difference in amyloid-β burden between patients and controls. The pooled difference for 746 participants with and without AF did not reach significance (SMD SUVr 0.14, 95%CI -0.06-0.34). Of the five studies on COD (one on differences between participants with and without COD, four on differences between hemispheres in unilateral COD), four did not find a difference in amyloid-β between participants or hemispheres. The pooled difference in amyloid-β load between hemispheres in 24 patients with unilateral COD was not significant (SMD SUVr -0.13, 95%CI -0.70-0.43). CONCLUSION: Based on current studies, although limited and heterogeneous, there is insufficient evidence to support the hypothesis that heart disease or COD are associated with increased cerebral amyloid-β burden.

Keywords

Amyloid-β, Cardiovascular disease, Carotid occlusive disease, Dementia, Heart disease, Positron emission tomography, Clinical Neurology, Neurology, Review, Journal Article

Citation

Starmans, N L P, Leeuwis, A E, Biessels, G J, Kappelle, L J, van der Flier, W M & Tolboom, N 2023, 'Cerebral amyloid-β deposition in patients with heart disease or carotid occlusive disease : A systematic review and meta-analysis', Journal of the Neurological Sciences, vol. 445, 120551. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jns.2023.120551