Dementia with Lewy bodies: a comparison of clinical diagnosis, FP-CIT single photon emission computed tomography imaging and autopsy
- Zuzana Walker1,
- Evelyn Jaros2,
- Rodney W H Walker3,
- Lean Lee4,
- Durval C Costa1,
- Gill Livingston1,
- Paul G Ince5,
- Robert Perry2,
- Ian McKeith6,
- Cornelius L E Katona1
- 1University College London and Royal Free Hospitals, London, UK
- 2Department of Neuropathology, Newcastle General Hospital, UK
- 3Barts and The London NHS Trust, London, UK
- 4North Essex Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust, UK
- 5University of Sheffield, Sheffield, UK
- 6Institute for Ageing and Health, University of Newcastle upon Tyne, Newcastle upon Tyne, UK
- Dr Zuzana Walker, Department of Mental Health Sciences, St Margaret’s Hospital, Epping, Essex, UK; z.walker{at}ucl.ac.uk
- Received 29 October 2006
- Revised 18 February 2007
- Accepted 23 February 2007
- Published Online First 12 March 2007
Abstract
Background: Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) is a common form of dementia. The presence of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pathology modifies the clinical features of DLB, making it harder to distinguish DLB from AD clinically during life. Clinical diagnostic criteria for DLB applied at presentation can fail to identify up to 50% of cases. Our aim was to determine, in a series of patients with dementia in whom autopsy confirmation of diagnosis was available, whether functional imaging of the nigrostriatal pathway improves the accuracy of diagnosis compared with diagnosis by means of clinical criteria alone.
Methods: A single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) scan was carried out with a dopaminergic presynaptic ligand [123I]-2beta-carbometoxy-3beta-(4-iodophenyl)-N-(3-fluoropropyl) nortropane (FP-CIT; ioflupane) on a group of patients with a clinical diagnosis of DLB or other dementia. An abnormal scan was defined as one in which right and left posterior putamen binding, measured semiquantitatively, was more than 2 SDs below the mean of the controls.
Results: Over a 10 year period it was possible to collect 20 patients who had been followed from the time of first assessment and time of scan through to death and subsequent detailed neuropathological autopsy. Eight patients fulfilled neuropathological diagnostic criteria for DLB. Nine patients had AD, mostly with coexisting cerebrovascular disease. Three patients had other diagnoses. The sensitivity of an initial clinical diagnosis of DLB was 75% and specificity was 42%. The sensitivity of the FP-CIT scan for the diagnosis of DLB was 88% and specificity was 100%.
Conclusion: FP-CIT SPECT scans substantially enhanced the accuracy of diagnosis of DLB by comparison with clinical criteria alone.
Footnotes
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The study was supported by grants from Amersham Health and Novartis.
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Competing interests: Dr Zuzana Walker, Professor Durval Costa and Professor Ian McKeith have received consultancy fees from GE Healthcare (previously Amersham Health), who also provided the FP-CIT ligand.
- Abbreviations:
- AD
- Alzheimer’s disease
- CBD
- cortico-basal degeneration
- CVD
- cerebrovascular disease
- DLB
- dementia with Lewy bodies
- LB
- Lewy body
- NFT
- neurofibrillary tangle
- PD
- Parkinson’s disease
- PET
- positron emission tomography
- SMU
- Strichman Medical Unit
- SPECT
- single photon emission computed tomography







