Frontiers in Neuroscience (Mar 2023)

Individualized network analysis: A novel approach to investigate tau PET using graph theory in the Alzheimer’s disease continuum

  • Hillary Protas,
  • Hillary Protas,
  • Valentina Ghisays,
  • Valentina Ghisays,
  • Dhruman D. Goradia,
  • Dhruman D. Goradia,
  • Robert Bauer,
  • Robert Bauer,
  • Vivek Devadas,
  • Vivek Devadas,
  • Kewei Chen,
  • Kewei Chen,
  • Kewei Chen,
  • Kewei Chen,
  • Kewei Chen,
  • Eric M. Reiman,
  • Eric M. Reiman,
  • Eric M. Reiman,
  • Eric M. Reiman,
  • Eric M. Reiman,
  • Eric M. Reiman,
  • Yi Su,
  • Yi Su,
  • Yi Su

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fnins.2023.1089134
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17

Abstract

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IntroductionTau PET imaging has emerged as an important tool to detect and monitor tangle burden in vivo in the study of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Previous studies demonstrated the association of tau burden with cognitive decline in probable AD cohorts. This study introduces a novel approach to analyze tau PET data by constructing individualized tau network structure and deriving its graph theory-based measures. We hypothesize that the network- based measures are a measure of the total tau load and the stage through disease.MethodsUsing tau PET data from the AD Neuroimaging Initiative from 369 participants, we determine the network measures, global efficiency, global strength, and limbic strength, and compare with two regional measures entorhinal and tau composite SUVR, in the ability to differentiate, cognitively unimpaired (CU), MCI and AD. We also investigate the correlation of these network and regional measures and a measure of memory performance, auditory verbal learning test for long-term recall memory (AVLT-LTM). Finally, we determine the stages based on global efficiency and limbic strength using conditional inference trees and compare with Braak staging.ResultsWe demonstrate that the derived network measures are able to differentiate three clinical stages of AD, CU, MCI, and AD. We also demonstrate that these network measures are strongly correlated with memory performance overall. Unlike regional tau measurements, the tau network measures were significantly associated with AVLT-LTM even in cognitively unimpaired individuals. Stages determined from global efficiency and limbic strength, visually resembled Braak staging.DiscussionThe strong correlations with memory particularly in CU suggest the proposed technique may be used to characterize subtle early tau accumulation. Further investigation is ongoing to examine this technique in a longitudinal setting.

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