Phenotypic variability in ALS-FTD and effect on survival
Rebekah M. Ahmed, Emma Devenney, Cherie Strikwerda‐Brown, John R. Hodges, Olivier Piguet, Matthew C. Kiernan
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To determine if survival and cognitive profile is affected by initial presentation in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis-frontotemporal dementia (ALS-FTD) (motor vs cognitive), we compared survival patterns in ALS-FTD based on initial phenotypic presentation and their cognitive profile compared to behavioral variant FTD (bvFTD). METHODS: Cognitive/behavioral profiles were examined in 98 patients (59 ALS-FTD and 39 bvFTD). The initial presentation of ALS-FTD was categorized into either motor or cognitive. Survival was calculated from initial symptom onset. MRI brain atrophy patterns were examined using a validated visual rating scale. RESULTS: = 0.01) and exhibited greater motor cortex and dorsal lateral prefrontal cortex atrophy than bvFTD. Increased motor cortex atrophy was associated with 1.5-fold reduction in survival. CONCLUSIONS: Initial motor presentation in ALS-FTD leads to faster progression than in those with a cognitive presentation, despite similar overall cognitive deficits. These findings suggest that disease progression in ALS-FTD may be critically linked to physiologic and motor changes.