Journal of Clinical and Translational Science (Apr 2023)

292 Hyperorality in Frontotemporal Dementia: Psychiatric and Neural Correlates Across the Disease Course

  • Christopher Morrow,
  • Vidyulata Kamath,
  • Chiadi Onyike

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1017/cts.2023.348
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 7
pp. 88 – 88

Abstract

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OBJECTIVES/GOALS: To describe cognitive and psychiatric symptom profiles of individuals with bvFTD and hyperorality. We test two hypotheses: (1) individuals with hyperorality show more severe psychiatric profiles and (2) neuroanatomic correlates of hyperorality in advanced bvFTD differ from those with early bvFTD. METHODS/STUDY POPULATION: Participants were enrolled in ALLFTD–a multi-site longitudinal study in FTD. We selected the 354 participants who had a primary clinical diagnosis of bvFTD, 344 of whom had data on hyperorality. Each participant underwent extensive clinical interviews and examinations, structural neuroimaging, and blood sampling. Five anatomic regions of interest were identified and analyzed based on previously identified neuroanatomic correlates of hyperorality. Differences in participant characteristics and clinical outcomes were compared using t-tests for continuous variables and Pearsonχ2 tests for categorical variables. Linear multivariate regression controlling for age and total intracranial volume (TIV) was used to examine associations between atrophy in regions of interest and hyperorality status. RESULTS/ANTICIPATED RESULTS: Early-stage participants with hyperorality had poorer self-monitoring, empathic concern, and perspective taking as well as higher CDR behavioral subscale scores compared to those without hyperorality. Advanced stage participants with hyperorality had higher scores on the Social Behavior Observer Checklist compared to those without hyperorality. Early-stage participants with hyperorality displayed higher rates of ritualistic/compulsive behavior and motor disturbance. Advanced stage participants had higher rates of apathy, ritualistic/compulsive behavior, anxiety, and elation. In the advanced stage participants, hyperorality was associated with atrophy in the right dorsal striatum, the right ventral striatum, and the right insula cortex. DISCUSSION/SIGNIFICANCE: Hyperorality emerges early and is accompanied by neuropsychiatric symptoms prior to significant neurodegeneration. Overtime, participants with hyperorality develop more psychiatric symptoms as well as atrophy in striatal and insular brain regions. Our findings suggest a role for novel interventions like non-invasive brain stimulation.