Brain Sciences (Jun 2024)

Tau Protein Accumulation Trajectory-Based Brain Age Prediction in the Alzheimer’s Disease Continuum

  • Min Wang,
  • Min Wei,
  • Luyao Wang,
  • Jun Song,
  • Axel Rominger,
  • Kuangyu Shi,
  • Jiehui Jiang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci14060575
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 6
p. 575

Abstract

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Clinical cognitive advancement within the Alzheimer’s disease (AD) continuum is intimately connected with sustained accumulation of tau protein pathology. The biological brain age and its gap show great potential for pathological risk and disease severity. In the present study, we applied multivariable linear support vector regression to train a normative brain age prediction model using tau brain images. We further assessed the predicted biological brain age and its gap for patients within the AD continuum. In the AD continuum, evaluated pathologic tau binding was found in the inferior temporal, parietal-temporal junction, precuneus/posterior cingulate, dorsal frontal, occipital, and inferior-medial temporal cortices. The biological brain age gaps of patients within the AD continuum were notably higher than those of the normal controls (p r = 0.726, p r = 0.845, p r = 0.797, p < 0.001). The pathologic tau-based age gap was significantly linked to neuropsychological scores. The proposed pathologic tau-based biological brain age model could track the tau protein accumulation trajectory of cognitive impairment and further provide a comprehensive quantification index for the tau accumulation risk.

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