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Research ArticleAdult Brain
Open Access

Can MRI Visual Assessment Differentiate the Variants of Primary-Progressive Aphasia?

S.A. Sajjadi, N. Sheikh-Bahaei, J. Cross, J.H. Gillard, D. Scoffings and P.J. Nestor
American Journal of Neuroradiology March 2017, DOI: https://doi.org/10.3174/ajnr.A5126
S.A. Sajjadi
From the Department of Neurology (S.A.S.), University of California, Irvine, Irvine, California; Department of Radiology (N.S.-B., J.H.G.), University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK; Department of Radiology (N.S.-.B., J.C., J.H.G., D.S.), Cambridge University Hospitals, Cambridge, UK; and German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (P.J.N.), Magdeburg, Germany.
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N. Sheikh-Bahaei
From the Department of Neurology (S.A.S.), University of California, Irvine, Irvine, California; Department of Radiology (N.S.-B., J.H.G.), University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK; Department of Radiology (N.S.-.B., J.C., J.H.G., D.S.), Cambridge University Hospitals, Cambridge, UK; and German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (P.J.N.), Magdeburg, Germany.
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J. Cross
From the Department of Neurology (S.A.S.), University of California, Irvine, Irvine, California; Department of Radiology (N.S.-B., J.H.G.), University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK; Department of Radiology (N.S.-.B., J.C., J.H.G., D.S.), Cambridge University Hospitals, Cambridge, UK; and German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (P.J.N.), Magdeburg, Germany.
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J.H. Gillard
From the Department of Neurology (S.A.S.), University of California, Irvine, Irvine, California; Department of Radiology (N.S.-B., J.H.G.), University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK; Department of Radiology (N.S.-.B., J.C., J.H.G., D.S.), Cambridge University Hospitals, Cambridge, UK; and German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (P.J.N.), Magdeburg, Germany.
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D. Scoffings
From the Department of Neurology (S.A.S.), University of California, Irvine, Irvine, California; Department of Radiology (N.S.-B., J.H.G.), University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK; Department of Radiology (N.S.-.B., J.C., J.H.G., D.S.), Cambridge University Hospitals, Cambridge, UK; and German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (P.J.N.), Magdeburg, Germany.
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P.J. Nestor
From the Department of Neurology (S.A.S.), University of California, Irvine, Irvine, California; Department of Radiology (N.S.-B., J.H.G.), University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK; Department of Radiology (N.S.-.B., J.C., J.H.G., D.S.), Cambridge University Hospitals, Cambridge, UK; and German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (P.J.N.), Magdeburg, Germany.
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Abstract

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE: Primary-progressive aphasia is a clinically and pathologically heterogeneous condition. Nonfluent, semantic, and logopenic are the currently recognized clinical variants. The recommendations for the classification of primary-progressive aphasia have advocated variant-specific patterns of atrophy. The aims of the present study were to evaluate the sensitivity and specificity of the proposed imaging criteria and to assess the intra- and interrater reporting agreements.

MATERIALS AND METHODS: The cohort comprised 51 patients with a root diagnosis of primary-progressive aphasia, 25 patients with typical Alzheimer disease, and 26 matched control participants. Group-level analysis (voxel-based morphometry) confirmed the proposed atrophy patterns for the 3 syndromes. The individual T1-weighted anatomic images were reported by 3 senior neuroradiologists.

RESULTS: We observed a dichotomized pattern of high sensitivity (92%) and specificity (93%) for the proposed atrophy pattern of semantic-variant primary-progressive aphasia and low sensitivity (21% for nonfluent-variant primary-progressive aphasia and 43% for logopenic-variant primary-progressive aphasia) but high specificity (91% for nonfluent-variant primary-progressive aphasia and 95% for logopenic-variant primary-progressive aphasia) in other primary-progressive aphasia variants and Alzheimer disease (sensitivity 43%, specificity 92%). MR imaging was least sensitive for the diagnosis of nonfluent-variant primary-progressive aphasia. Intrarater agreement analysis showed mean |gk values above the widely accepted threshold of 0.6 (mean, 0.63 ± 0.16). Pair-wise interobserver agreement outcomes, however, were well below this threshold in 5 of the 6 possible interrater contrasts (mean, 0.41 ± 0.09).

CONCLUSIONS: While the group-level results were in precise agreement with the recommendations, semantic-variant primary-progressive aphasia was the only subtype for which the proposed recommendations were both sensitive and specific at an individual level.

Abbreviations

AD
Alzheimer disease
lvPPA
logopenic-variant PPA
nfvPPA
nonfluent-variant PPA
PPA
primary-progressive aphasia
svPPA
semantic-variant PPA
  • © 2017 American Society of Neuroradiology

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Cite this article
S.A. Sajjadi, N. Sheikh-Bahaei, J. Cross, J.H. Gillard, D. Scoffings, P.J. Nestor
Can MRI Visual Assessment Differentiate the Variants of Primary-Progressive Aphasia?
American Journal of Neuroradiology Mar 2017, DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A5126

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Can MRI Visual Assessment Differentiate the Variants of Primary-Progressive Aphasia?
S.A. Sajjadi, N. Sheikh-Bahaei, J. Cross, J.H. Gillard, D. Scoffings, P.J. Nestor
American Journal of Neuroradiology Mar 2017, DOI: 10.3174/ajnr.A5126
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