Longitudinal change in everyday function and behavioral symptoms in frontotemporal dementia.
Longitudinal change in everyday function and behavioral symptoms in frontotemporal dementia.
Background:
The relationship between behavioral changes and functional decline in frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is not well understood.
Methods:
Thirty-nine patients (21 behavioral variant FTD [bvFTD], 18 semantic variant primary progressive aphasia [svPPA]) were followed up longitudinally (2–4 years follow-up). Functional (Disability Assessment for Dementia) and behavioral (Cambridge Behavioural Inventory Revised) assessments were included for between-group (pairwise comparisons, mixed model analysis) and within-group analyses (bivariate correlations).
Results:
Functionally, patients with bvFTD were more impaired than patients with svPPA at baseline and continued to be at follow-up, despite similar disease duration. By contrast, behavioral impairments differed between patient groups at baseline and at follow-up. At baseline, patients with bvFTD exhibited higher levels of apathy and changes in eating than patients with svPPA; disinhibited and stereotypical behaviors were similar. Over the years, patients with bvFTD showed reduction in disinhibition and stereotypical behavior while apathy and eating changes increased. By contrast, all measured behaviors increased in patients with svPPA over time. Finally, only apathy made longitudinal contributions to functional disability in patients with svPPA, whereas apathy and stereotypical behavior were associated with increased disability in patients with bvFTD.
Conclusions:
Despite shared overlapping baseline behavioral symptoms, patients with bvFTD are more functionally impaired than patients with svPPA. Apathy has a strong role in disability for both bvFTD and svPPA, but stereotypical behaviors only contributed to functional deficits in patients with bvFTD. Our findings suggest that rigid/compulsive behaviors may in fact support activity engagement in patients with svPPA. Taken together, our results indicate that interventions to reduce disability in the FTD spectrum require an alternative rationale in comparison to Alzheimer disease dementia, and should carefully weigh the interaction of behavioral symptoms and functional status.
419-428
CM, O'Connor
03d7bc74-344f-4707-bc8a-f5907a23cede
Clemson, L
e1e15505-0e42-4b91-92f3-43cc46733827
Hornberger, M
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d
CE, Leyton
6a3b11a7-75a7-495c-9965-e274cb6df08f
JR, Hodges
936bf0c6-b9ab-46eb-a3ed-2a6b719019aa
Piguet, O
edb4727c-9766-4217-8010-1fcd83281548
Mioshi, E
5310242a-e90b-476d-a02d-51f13f973c8e
CM, O'Connor
03d7bc74-344f-4707-bc8a-f5907a23cede
Clemson, L
e1e15505-0e42-4b91-92f3-43cc46733827
Hornberger, M
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d
CE, Leyton
6a3b11a7-75a7-495c-9965-e274cb6df08f
JR, Hodges
936bf0c6-b9ab-46eb-a3ed-2a6b719019aa
Piguet, O
edb4727c-9766-4217-8010-1fcd83281548
Mioshi, E
5310242a-e90b-476d-a02d-51f13f973c8e
CM, O'Connor, Clemson, L, Hornberger, M, CE, Leyton, JR, Hodges, Piguet, O and Mioshi, E
(2016)
Longitudinal change in everyday function and behavioral symptoms in frontotemporal dementia.
Neurology: Clinical Practice, .
(doi:10.1212/cpj.0000000000000264).
Abstract
Background:
The relationship between behavioral changes and functional decline in frontotemporal dementia (FTD) is not well understood.
Methods:
Thirty-nine patients (21 behavioral variant FTD [bvFTD], 18 semantic variant primary progressive aphasia [svPPA]) were followed up longitudinally (2–4 years follow-up). Functional (Disability Assessment for Dementia) and behavioral (Cambridge Behavioural Inventory Revised) assessments were included for between-group (pairwise comparisons, mixed model analysis) and within-group analyses (bivariate correlations).
Results:
Functionally, patients with bvFTD were more impaired than patients with svPPA at baseline and continued to be at follow-up, despite similar disease duration. By contrast, behavioral impairments differed between patient groups at baseline and at follow-up. At baseline, patients with bvFTD exhibited higher levels of apathy and changes in eating than patients with svPPA; disinhibited and stereotypical behaviors were similar. Over the years, patients with bvFTD showed reduction in disinhibition and stereotypical behavior while apathy and eating changes increased. By contrast, all measured behaviors increased in patients with svPPA over time. Finally, only apathy made longitudinal contributions to functional disability in patients with svPPA, whereas apathy and stereotypical behavior were associated with increased disability in patients with bvFTD.
Conclusions:
Despite shared overlapping baseline behavioral symptoms, patients with bvFTD are more functionally impaired than patients with svPPA. Apathy has a strong role in disability for both bvFTD and svPPA, but stereotypical behaviors only contributed to functional deficits in patients with bvFTD. Our findings suggest that rigid/compulsive behaviors may in fact support activity engagement in patients with svPPA. Taken together, our results indicate that interventions to reduce disability in the FTD spectrum require an alternative rationale in comparison to Alzheimer disease dementia, and should carefully weigh the interaction of behavioral symptoms and functional status.
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o-connor-et-al-2016-longitudinal-change-in-everyday-function-and-behavioral-symptoms-in-frontotemporal-dementia
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e-pub ahead of print date: 17 June 2016
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Local EPrints ID: 505233
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505233
PURE UUID: 30667c05-f7c8-415b-b832-16abdf645ca6
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Date deposited: 02 Oct 2025 16:44
Last modified: 03 Oct 2025 02:18
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Author:
O'Connor CM
Author:
L Clemson
Author:
M Hornberger
Author:
Leyton CE
Author:
Hodges JR
Author:
O Piguet
Author:
E Mioshi
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