Measuring disease progression in corticobasal syndrome
Measuring disease progression in corticobasal syndrome
Corticobasal syndrome (CBS) is a complex neurodegenerative disorder with marked clinical, neuropsychological, and pathological heterogeneity. Measurement of disease progression in CBS is complex and little understood. This study aimed to establish clinical and neuropsychological indicators of prognosis in CBS. Patients with CBS were retrospectively recruited from a frontotemporal dementia specific research clinic. All patients underwent detailed clinical and neuropsychological testing including the frontotemporal dementia rating scale (FRS). Using the differences in FRS logit scores over a period of 12 months, CBS patients were divided into rapid and slow progressor groups. Demographic, clinical and neuropsychological features were compared between the two groups. Sixteen participants who met defined criteria were included (9 males, 7 females; mean age 65.8 ± 22 years; median symptom duration 51.8 ± 22 years; mean duration of follow-up 11.4 ± 2.8 months). There were no significant differences between the rapid and slow progressors in age, gender, symptom duration, motor/cognitive presentation, and ACE-R scores at baseline. Clinically, slow progressors were significantly more likely to have a motor speech disorder, with a trend for more frequent dysgraphia, whereas rapid progressors were more likely to exhibit surface dyslexia. Rapid and slow progressor groups did not differ on neuropsychological performance. The presence of motor speech disorder, dysgraphia, and surface dyslexia may be useful in differentiating patients with rapid progression of CBS from those with a more indolent disease course.
1598-1605
Huang, Nancy
dcd1ab7b-c6dd-4fed-9cb9-890c3c048fab
Hornberger, Michael
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d
Hodges, John R.
7e7a95ab-a65f-42a1-8c01-30917e6b2f3d
Burrell, James R.
c3839d64-215c-4e62-933c-9ccbd05e1b3b
August 2014
Huang, Nancy
dcd1ab7b-c6dd-4fed-9cb9-890c3c048fab
Hornberger, Michael
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d
Hodges, John R.
7e7a95ab-a65f-42a1-8c01-30917e6b2f3d
Burrell, James R.
c3839d64-215c-4e62-933c-9ccbd05e1b3b
Huang, Nancy, Hornberger, Michael, Hodges, John R. and Burrell, James R.
(2014)
Measuring disease progression in corticobasal syndrome.
Journal of Neurology, 261, .
(doi:10.1007/s00415-014-7389-5).
Abstract
Corticobasal syndrome (CBS) is a complex neurodegenerative disorder with marked clinical, neuropsychological, and pathological heterogeneity. Measurement of disease progression in CBS is complex and little understood. This study aimed to establish clinical and neuropsychological indicators of prognosis in CBS. Patients with CBS were retrospectively recruited from a frontotemporal dementia specific research clinic. All patients underwent detailed clinical and neuropsychological testing including the frontotemporal dementia rating scale (FRS). Using the differences in FRS logit scores over a period of 12 months, CBS patients were divided into rapid and slow progressor groups. Demographic, clinical and neuropsychological features were compared between the two groups. Sixteen participants who met defined criteria were included (9 males, 7 females; mean age 65.8 ± 22 years; median symptom duration 51.8 ± 22 years; mean duration of follow-up 11.4 ± 2.8 months). There were no significant differences between the rapid and slow progressors in age, gender, symptom duration, motor/cognitive presentation, and ACE-R scores at baseline. Clinically, slow progressors were significantly more likely to have a motor speech disorder, with a trend for more frequent dysgraphia, whereas rapid progressors were more likely to exhibit surface dyslexia. Rapid and slow progressor groups did not differ on neuropsychological performance. The presence of motor speech disorder, dysgraphia, and surface dyslexia may be useful in differentiating patients with rapid progression of CBS from those with a more indolent disease course.
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Accepted/In Press date: 24 May 2014
e-pub ahead of print date: 4 June 2014
Published date: August 2014
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Local EPrints ID: 504590
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/504590
ISSN: 0340-5354
PURE UUID: 8d4a316d-0e3f-476d-beaf-6b07d078d0cb
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Date deposited: 16 Sep 2025 16:33
Last modified: 17 Sep 2025 02:22
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Author:
Nancy Huang
Author:
Michael Hornberger
Author:
John R. Hodges
Author:
James R. Burrell
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