Early detection of cognitive decline is becoming increasingly important as new therapies become available for conditions like Alzheimer’s disease. A new 20-year study in JAMA Network Open shows that MRI can detect structural brain changes indicating future cognitive decline – years before symptoms occur.
Longitudinal research has shown that subtle changes in body structure – be they in the heart, brain, or other organs – can predict future disease risk, in some cases decades in advance.
- That enables the possibility of targeted treatments or behavioral interventions to reduce risk before sick patients experience a cascade of expensive and invasive therapies.
Mild cognitive impairment is an excellent example. MCI can be a transition to more serious diseases like Alzheimer’s, and previous research has connected it to vascular risk factors that are signs of brain atrophy.
- In the current paper, researchers analyzed MRI scans acquired as part of the BIOCARD cohort, a longitudinal study started in 1995 in which cognitively normal participants got baseline brain MRI scans and follow-up exams.
In a group of 185 BIOCARD participants, researchers tracked how many transitioned to MCI over a mean follow-up period of 20 years, then compared structural brain changes on MRI, finding …
- 60 participants (32%) progressed to MCI, eight of whom later developed dementia (4.3%).
- Those with white-matter atrophy on MRI had an 86% higher chance of progression to MCI, the highest rate of any variable studied.
- Participants with enlargement of the ventricles on MRI had 71% higher risk.
- Other variables like diabetes and amyloid pathology also had higher risk, but not at the rate of the MRI-detected variables.
The findings indicate that white-matter volume is closely associated with cognitive function in aging, and that people with higher rates of change are more likely to develop MCI.
- The association of diabetes with MCI was not a shock, but researchers said they were surprised there was no association from risk factors like hypertension, dyslipidemia, and smoking.
The Takeaway
The new findings demonstrate the power of MRI to predict pathology years in advance – the question is how and whether to put this knowledge into clinical practice. One could almost see structural brain scans incorporated into whole-body MRI screening exams (if anyone’s listening).