Cognitive Impairment and Dementia in Parkinson's Disease - Clinical Features, Diagnosis, and Management
Cognitive Impairment and Dementia in Parkinson's Disease - Clinical Features, Diagnosis, and Management
Cognitive Impairment and Dementia in Parkinson's Disease - Clinical Features, Diagnosis, and Management
Edited by:
Martin Rhys Farlow, Indiana
University School of Medicine, USA
Reviewed by:
Pablo Martinez, Reina Sophia
Institute, Spain
Jonathan Rohrer, University College
London, UK
*Correspondence:
Joo Massano, Movement Disorders
and Functional Surgery Unit,
Department of Neurology, Centro
Hospitalar de So Joo, Alameda
Professor Hernni Monteiro,
4200-319 Porto, Portugal.
e-mail: [email protected]
INTRODUCTION
Parkinsons disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder, following Alzheimers disease. Nearly 200 years
have gone by since James Parkinsons original clinical depictions in
his monograph entitled An Essay on the Shaking Palsy (Parkinson,
1817; Goetz, 2011). The text focused mainly on the motor features of PD, overlooking non-motor symptoms, with the notable
exception of melancholy but cognitive impairment was at that
time completely disregarded. It is currently recognized that the
spectrum of non-motor features in PD is broad (Chaudhuri and
Schapira, 2009; Tolosa et al., 2009; Massano and Bhatia, 2012),
but these may often be missed in clinical practice. Nonetheless,
whenever PD is suspected, the routine approach should include a
set of questions aimed at exploring their presence, since they may
be helpful hints for the diagnosis, although they are non-specific
in this regard. On the other hand, it is useful to quantify their
severity and impact, as they carry an important additional burden on the patients, leading to significantly deteriorated quality
of life (QOL), and warranting specific therapeutic interventions,
despite the fact that evidence-based data on treatment are unsatisfactory in many instances (Chaudhuri and Schapira, 2009; Tolosa
et al., 2009; Zesiewicz et al., 2010). Braak and coworkers have
greatly contributed to the awareness of the association between
symptoms and the neuropathological lesions affecting the nervous system (Braak et al., 2003; Hawkes et al., 2010). Indeed, due
to long term progression and the mode of pathological spreading,
some of the non-motor features of PD may be present before any
of the classical motor signs are noticeable, sometimes for years
or even decades, which may lend them potential utility as supportive diagnostic features in early disease stages these include
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METHODS
A comprehensive PubMed literature search was conducted for
papers published until September 2011, using the keywords
Parkinsons disease, Parkinsons disease dementia, mild cognitive impairment. From all the references found, the authors
have consensually chosen those most relevant to the review, in
at death was also much lower in the first group (72.4 versus
77.8 years). Differences regarding life expectancy and age at death
in older-onset PD-D were less obvious (Hobson et al., 2010). Other
authors have also found an increased mortality risk among PD
patients with dementia (Levy et al., 2002; de Lau et al., 2005).
COGNITIVE PHENOTYPE OF PARKINSONS DISEASE DEMENTIA
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Psychotic symptoms
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Impairment in at least two of the four typically involved cognitive domains (impaired and often fluctuating attention; dysexecutive changes; impaired visuospatial abilities; and impaired free
recall that improves with cueing) must be documented without
prominent language dysfunction, as demonstrated by clinical and
cognitive examination. The authors take into account that the
main behavioral or neuropsychiatric symptoms seen in PD-D
include visual hallucinations, delusions, apathy, depressed mood,
anxiety, and excessive daytime sleepiness. These features are frequent in PD-D, but their presence is not invariable. The presence
of at least one symptom from this set supports, but is not required
for, the diagnosis of PD-D. Further details on diagnostic criteria
for PD-D can be found in Emre et al. (2007a) and the proposed
neuropsychological assessment methods to be carried out with
these patients have been published in Dubois et al. (2007), from
the same workgroup.
Clinical validation efforts have been carried out from experienced groups in this field, regarding this proposal. Dujardin and
coworkers have enrolled 188 PD patients, which have been assessed
using the two-step cognitive evaluation recommended by the MDS
task force (shorter battery followed by longer comprehensive cognitive assessment battery), recording also the presence or absence
of dementia after each step had been taken. After the short battery
had been applied 18.62% of PD patients were suspected of having
dementia, whereas 21.81% fulfilled criteria for probable PD-D
following the longer battery. The authors have found that the
short batterys sensitivity and specificity were 65.85 and 94.56%,
respectively but using specific cutoff scores the sensitivity would
increase considerably without significant loss of specificity, thus
suggesting that PD-D can be diagnosed accurately with the shorter
battery as well as the longer assessment method. Specifically, an
MMSE score <27, the inability to recall five words immediately
after learning, being unable to generate >7 words beginning with
S within 60 s, the lack of full personal independence in managing antiparkinsonian medications, and age >69 years seem to be
associated with a high probability of PD-D (Dujardin et al., 2010).
Martinez-Martin and coworkers have compared the MDS criteria for the diagnosis of PD-D with dementia criteria established
by the DSM-IV. In this study, 299 PD patients have been enrolled,
and the authors have found out that the DSM-IV criteria failed to
identify 22% of patients fulfilling the MDS criteria. False negative
cases were older and had more severe motor symptoms, but less
psychosis than those true non-demented PD. False positives had
less severe motor symptoms than true PD-D, although the difference did not reach statistical significance. These findings suggest
that the MDS criteria are more sensitive than DSM-IV for diagnosing PD-D, and that it could be more difficult to diagnose PD-D
in older patients, as well as those with less psychotic symptoms or
severe motor impairment (Martinez-Martin et al., 2011).
Another clinical study aimed at comparing the diagnostic
acuity for PD-D of the eight-item screening checklist proposed
by the MDS task force, as compared to full neuropsychological assessment. This is an important issue since comprehensive
neuropsychological testing is not widely available in every practice
setting, thus short screening tools would be most welcome. The
authors have assessed 91 PD patients of these 7 (7.7% of all
subjects) met criteria for probable PD-D based on the screening
A number of studies assessing cognitive functioning in nondemented PD have been published. Cognitive deficits in PD are
traditionally seen as subcortical in their nature, as several studies have demonstrated that there is a significant impairment in
executive functions such as poor planning, sequencing, cognitive
flexibility, and problem solving capacities (Pai and Chan, 2001;
Muslimovic et al., 2005; Barone et al., 2011). Memory impairments, including encoding, recall, and procedural memory are also
affected (Foltynie et al., 2004). Recognition is thought to remain
relatively well preserved (Foltynie et al., 2004). Language dysfunction is rarely reported, with an exception of deficits in phonemic
and semantic tasks, which exist and tend to decline over time and
with disease severity, as evaluated by the Hoehn and Yahr stage,
predicting also a future diagnosis of dementia (Barone et al., 2011).
Identifying PD-MCI is clinically relevant, given that these
patients appear to be at increased risk for developing PD-D
(Litvan et al., 2011). On the other hand, one wonders if drug therapy known to be effective in PD-D could be also of benefit at the
stage of MCI, although this has not been formally studied in large
trials. A contributing factor for this might be the lack of broadly
accepted definitions and efficacy endpoints. In this regard, a very
recent advance has been achieved, as the first set of consensus
diagnostic criteria for PD-MCI have been proposed (Litvan et al.,
2012).
DIAGNOSTIC CRITERIA FOR MCI IN PARKINSONS DISEASE
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usually emerge in the fourth or fifth decades, and patients display typical PD features, except that early prominent cognitive
decline and dementia is a common event. Hence, the clinical picture may resemble DLB, although age at onset is much lower than
in the classical cases. PARK1 and PARK4 are due to SNCA mutations and duplications/triplications, respectively (Polymeropoulos
et al., 1997; Spira et al., 2001; Zarranz et al., 2004). PARK8 is probably the most common type of inherited PD. It has been reported
that mutation frequency is about 40% in North African Arabs and
Ashkenazi Jewish populations; high mutation frequency has also
been reported in populations from southern Europe (Healy et al.,
2008). The clinical picture resembles that of classical sporadic PD
(Wszolek et al., 2004; Healy et al., 2008), and cognitive singularities
have not been reported in this form of the disease, with a dementia
prevalence of about 11% (Kasten et al., 2010).
Three forms of autosomal recessive PD have been described:
PARK2 (gene Parkin), PARK6 (gene PINK1, PTEN-induced putative kinase 1), and PARK7 (gene DJ-1), here listed by decreasing
order of frequency. The clinical pattern of PARK2 includes, in
addition to typical PD features, a variety of symptoms such as
hyperreflexia, prominent dystonia, sensory axonal neuropathy,
increased sensitivity to levodopa induced dyskinesias, and psychosis (Abbas et al., 1999; Klein et al., 2000; Lcking et al., 2000;
Gouider-Khouja et al., 2003; Khan et al., 2003; Deng et al., 2006;
Wickremaratchi et al., 2009). Notably, non-motor symptoms seem
to be less prevalent than in sporadic PD, except anxiety (Kgi et al.,
2010). Therefore, cognitive decline is apparently less frequent,
as compared to sporadic PD. Lewy bodies were absent in most
patients that came to autopsy (Farrer et al., 2001; Gouider-Khouja
et al., 2003). Age at onset of symptoms ranges from childhood
to mid-fifties. It accounts for most PD cases under the age of
30 years. PARK6 and PARK7 share many common clinical features with PARK2, including early onset, excellent response to
levodopa, and frequent levodopa induced dyskinesias, but psychiatric features may be more prominent in PARK6 (Valente et al.,
2001, 2002, 2004; van Duijn et al., 2001; Abou-Sleiman et al.,
2003; Dekker et al., 2003; Bonifati et al., 2005; Ibez et al., 2006;
Leutenegger et al., 2006; Steinlechner et al., 2007; Kasten et al.,
2010).
GLUCOCEREBROSIDASE MUTATIONS: MORE THAN A SIMPLE RISK
FACTOR FOR PD
In a Spanish case-control study MAPT haplotypes were determined in 202 PD patients (48 of these with dementia), 41 patients
with DLB (pathologically confirmed in 17), 164 patients with AD,
and 374 controls. The authors have found that the haplotype H1 is
significantly overrepresented in PD patients compared with controls and that the association was significantly stronger in PD-D
than in non-demented PD patients, suggesting that MAPT H1
haplotype seems to be a strong risk factor for PD and for dementia
in PD patients. In addition, no association could be found between
any of the MAPT subhaplotypes and DLB or AD (Set-Salvia et al.,
2011).
The groups led by Andrew Siderowf has studied genotypic variants of apolipoprotein E (APOE), catechol-O-mehyltransferase
(COMT ), and MAPT, and whether these could be correlated with
cognitive decline in PD in 212 clinically diagnosed patients followed up prospectively. APOE allele E4 was associated with faster
decline, and MAPT and COMT could be correlated with performance in memory and attention, respectively, but not with the rate
of general cognitive decline, as assessed with the Mattis Dementia
Rating Scale version 2. Of note, 96% of patients in this cohort were
assessed no later than at 3 years of follow-up (Morley et al., 2012).
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Parkinsons disease is much more than a motor disorder and a
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