Impact of dopamine deficiency and REM sleep behavior disorder on cognition in early neuronal synuclein disease with hyposmia

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Objectives

To determine the impact of dopamine deficiency and isolated REM sleep behavior disorder (iRBD) on cognitive performance in early neuronal alpha-synuclein disease (NSD) with hyposmia.

Methods

Using Parkinson’s Progression Markers Initiative baseline data, cognitive performance was assessed with a cognitive summary score (CSS) developed by applying regression-based internal norms derived from a robust healthy control (HC) group. Performance was examined for participants with hyposmia classified as NSD-Integrated Staging System (NSD-ISS) Stage 2, either Stage 2A (CSF alpha-synuclein seed amplification assay [SAA]+, SPECT dopamine transporter scan [DaTscan]-) or 2B (SAA+, DaTscan+).

Results

Participants were Stage 2A (N=101), Stage 2B (N=227) and HCs (N=158). Although Stage 2 overall had intact Montreal Cognitive Assessment scores (mean (SD) =27.0 (2.3)), Stage 2A had a numerically worse CSS (z-score mean difference =0.05, p-value NS; effect size=0.09) and Stage 2B had a statistically worse CSS (z-score mean difference =0.23, p-value <0.05; effect size=0.40) compared with HCs. In Stage 2A participants with hyposmia alone had normal cognition, but presence of comorbid iRBD was associated with significantly worse cognition (z-score mean difference =0.33, p-value <0.05, effect size =0.50). In Stage 2B participants with hyposmia had abnormal cognition (z-score mean difference =0.18, p-value =.0078, effect size =0.29), and superimposed iRBD had a non-statistically significant additive effect.

Interpretation

Using a CSS, early NSD with hyposmia is associated with measurable cognitive deficits compared with robust HCs, particularly in presence of dopamine system impairment or comorbid iRBD, highlighting the importance of focusing on cognition in early-stage synuclein disease.

Article activity feed