Brain volume change following anti-amyloid β immunotherapy for Alzheimer's disease: amyloid-removal-related pseudo-atrophy
Brain volume change following anti-amyloid β immunotherapy for Alzheimer's disease: amyloid-removal-related pseudo-atrophy
Progressive cerebral volume loss on MRI is a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease and has been widely used as an outcome measure in clinical trials, with the prediction that disease-modifying treatments would slow loss. However, in trials of anti-amyloid immunotherapy, the participants who received treatment had excess volume loss. Explanations for this observation range from reduction of amyloid β plaque burden and related inflammatory changes through to treatment-induced toxicity. The excess volume changes are characteristic of only those immunotherapies that achieve amyloid β lowering; are compatible with plaque removal; and evidence to date does not suggest an association with harmful effects. Based on the current evidence, we suggest that these changes can be described as amyloid-removal-related pseudo-atrophy. Better understanding of the causes and consequences of these changes is important to enable informed decisions about treatments. Patient-level analyses of data from the trials are urgently needed, along with longitudinal follow-up and neuroimaging data, to determine the long-term trajectory of these volume changes and their clinical correlates. Post-mortem examination of cerebral tissue from treated patients and evaluation of potential correlation with antemortem neuroimaging findings are key priorities.
1025-1034
Belder, Christopher R.S.
1725439b-2592-41b8-bd35-19b6023ff9db
Boche, Delphine
bdcca10e-6302-4dd0-919f-67218f7e0d61
Nicoll, James
88c0685f-000e-4eb7-8f72-f36b4985e8ed
Jaunmuktane, Zane
da991f82-7818-46d3-93bf-e182358a76b0
Zetterberg, Henrik
eeb5286d-633c-4269-9ffe-47b5c9ac82e3
Schott, Jonathan M.
721870f8-b25c-445e-b32d-63d2d686b6a6
Barkhof, Frederik
a42aab63-9123-4eae-8090-51c02908fae3
Fox, Nick C.
766c3cb6-f888-4c9f-872c-e684ae2c6fcb
18 September 2024
Belder, Christopher R.S.
1725439b-2592-41b8-bd35-19b6023ff9db
Boche, Delphine
bdcca10e-6302-4dd0-919f-67218f7e0d61
Nicoll, James
88c0685f-000e-4eb7-8f72-f36b4985e8ed
Jaunmuktane, Zane
da991f82-7818-46d3-93bf-e182358a76b0
Zetterberg, Henrik
eeb5286d-633c-4269-9ffe-47b5c9ac82e3
Schott, Jonathan M.
721870f8-b25c-445e-b32d-63d2d686b6a6
Barkhof, Frederik
a42aab63-9123-4eae-8090-51c02908fae3
Fox, Nick C.
766c3cb6-f888-4c9f-872c-e684ae2c6fcb
Belder, Christopher R.S., Boche, Delphine, Nicoll, James, Jaunmuktane, Zane, Zetterberg, Henrik, Schott, Jonathan M., Barkhof, Frederik and Fox, Nick C.
(2024)
Brain volume change following anti-amyloid β immunotherapy for Alzheimer's disease: amyloid-removal-related pseudo-atrophy.
The Lancet Neurology, 23 (10), .
(doi:10.1016/S1474-4422(24)00335-1).
Abstract
Progressive cerebral volume loss on MRI is a hallmark of Alzheimer's disease and has been widely used as an outcome measure in clinical trials, with the prediction that disease-modifying treatments would slow loss. However, in trials of anti-amyloid immunotherapy, the participants who received treatment had excess volume loss. Explanations for this observation range from reduction of amyloid β plaque burden and related inflammatory changes through to treatment-induced toxicity. The excess volume changes are characteristic of only those immunotherapies that achieve amyloid β lowering; are compatible with plaque removal; and evidence to date does not suggest an association with harmful effects. Based on the current evidence, we suggest that these changes can be described as amyloid-removal-related pseudo-atrophy. Better understanding of the causes and consequences of these changes is important to enable informed decisions about treatments. Patient-level analyses of data from the trials are urgently needed, along with longitudinal follow-up and neuroimaging data, to determine the long-term trajectory of these volume changes and their clinical correlates. Post-mortem examination of cerebral tissue from treated patients and evaluation of potential correlation with antemortem neuroimaging findings are key priorities.
Text
THELANCETNEUROLOGY-D-24-00401
- Accepted Manuscript
More information
Accepted/In Press date: 11 August 2024
e-pub ahead of print date: 18 September 2024
Published date: 18 September 2024
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 509813
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/509813
ISSN: 1474-4422
PURE UUID: 15f5e00a-0ace-4aef-9bd4-cbfaa67ca4d5
Catalogue record
Date deposited: 06 Mar 2026 10:15
Last modified: 07 Mar 2026 07:19
Export record
Altmetrics
Contributors
Author:
Christopher R.S. Belder
Author:
Zane Jaunmuktane
Author:
Henrik Zetterberg
Author:
Jonathan M. Schott
Author:
Frederik Barkhof
Author:
Nick C. Fox
Download statistics
Downloads from ePrints over the past year. Other digital versions may also be available to download e.g. from the publisher's website.
View more statistics