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Social cognition deficits: The key to discriminate behavioral variant frontotemporal Dementia from Alzheimer's Disease Regardless of Amnesia?

Social cognition deficits: The key to discriminate behavioral variant frontotemporal Dementia from Alzheimer's Disease Regardless of Amnesia?
Social cognition deficits: The key to discriminate behavioral variant frontotemporal Dementia from Alzheimer's Disease Regardless of Amnesia?
Relative sparing of episodic memory is a diagnostic criterion of behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD). However, increasing evidence suggests that bvFTD patients can show episodic memory deficits at a similar level as Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Social cognition tasks have been proposed to distinguish bvFTD, but no study to date has explored the utility of such tasks for the diagnosis of amnestic bvFTD. Here, we contrasted social cognition performance of amnestic and non-amnestic bvFTD from AD, with a subgroup having confirmed in vivo pathology markers. Ninety-six participants (38 bvFTD and 28 AD patients as well as 30 controls) performed the short Social-cognition and Emotional Assessment (mini-SEA). BvFTD patients were divided into amnestic versus non-amnestic presentation using the validated Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test (FCSRT) assessing episodic memory. As expected, the accuracy of the FCSRT to distinguish the overall bvFTD group from AD was low (69.7% ) with ∼50% of bvFTD patients being amnestic. By contrast, the diagnostic accuracy of the mini-SEA was high (87.9% ). When bvFTD patients were split on the level of amnesia, mini-SEA diagnostic accuracy remained high (85.1% ) for amnestic bvFTD versus AD and increased to very high (93.9% ) for non-amnestic bvFTD versus AD. Social cognition deficits can distinguish bvFTD and AD regardless of amnesia to a high degree and provide a simple way to distinguish both diseases at presentation. These findings have clear implications for the diagnostic criteria of bvFTD. They suggest that the emphasis should be on social cognition deficits with episodic memory deficits not being a helpful diagnostic criterion in bvFTD.
Bertoux, M
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LC, de Souza
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O'Callaghan, C
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Greve, A
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Sarazin, M
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Dubois, B
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Hornberger, M
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Bertoux, M
cd351b78-c9bc-4d36-9a29-cc365fe16c34
LC, de Souza
bf26e366-e890-4703-9e11-efe3de839c0a
O'Callaghan, C
f47ed92d-85af-42c8-b6db-3f75437f6147
Greve, A
d045dbeb-84c1-4734-811b-f0adcaadee82
Sarazin, M
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Dubois, B
0e3c0bf6-fe09-4cee-99e5-3a67bcd7f88a
Hornberger, M
a48c1c63-422a-4c11-9a51-c7be0aa3026d

Bertoux, M, LC, de Souza, O'Callaghan, C, Greve, A, Sarazin, M, Dubois, B and Hornberger, M (2016) Social cognition deficits: The key to discriminate behavioral variant frontotemporal Dementia from Alzheimer's Disease Regardless of Amnesia? Journal of Alzheimer's Disease : JAD, 49 (4). (doi:10.3233/jad-150686).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Relative sparing of episodic memory is a diagnostic criterion of behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD). However, increasing evidence suggests that bvFTD patients can show episodic memory deficits at a similar level as Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Social cognition tasks have been proposed to distinguish bvFTD, but no study to date has explored the utility of such tasks for the diagnosis of amnestic bvFTD. Here, we contrasted social cognition performance of amnestic and non-amnestic bvFTD from AD, with a subgroup having confirmed in vivo pathology markers. Ninety-six participants (38 bvFTD and 28 AD patients as well as 30 controls) performed the short Social-cognition and Emotional Assessment (mini-SEA). BvFTD patients were divided into amnestic versus non-amnestic presentation using the validated Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test (FCSRT) assessing episodic memory. As expected, the accuracy of the FCSRT to distinguish the overall bvFTD group from AD was low (69.7% ) with ∼50% of bvFTD patients being amnestic. By contrast, the diagnostic accuracy of the mini-SEA was high (87.9% ). When bvFTD patients were split on the level of amnesia, mini-SEA diagnostic accuracy remained high (85.1% ) for amnestic bvFTD versus AD and increased to very high (93.9% ) for non-amnestic bvFTD versus AD. Social cognition deficits can distinguish bvFTD and AD regardless of amnesia to a high degree and provide a simple way to distinguish both diseases at presentation. These findings have clear implications for the diagnostic criteria of bvFTD. They suggest that the emphasis should be on social cognition deficits with episodic memory deficits not being a helpful diagnostic criterion in bvFTD.

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e-pub ahead of print date: 20 November 2015
Published date: January 2016

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505413
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505413
PURE UUID: 7b26fe8f-fc27-4db3-b08d-848619b5b76a
ORCID for C O'Callaghan: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1839-0591
ORCID for M Hornberger: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-2214-3788

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Date deposited: 07 Oct 2025 17:19
Last modified: 08 Oct 2025 02:17

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Contributors

Author: M Bertoux
Author: de Souza LC
Author: C O'Callaghan ORCID iD
Author: A Greve
Author: M Sarazin
Author: B Dubois
Author: M Hornberger ORCID iD

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