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Neuroimaging criteria and cognitive performance in vascular mild cognitive impairment: a systematic review

CRITÉRIOS DE NEUROIMAGEM E DESEMPENHO COGNITIVO NO COMPROMETIMENTO COGNITIVO LEVE VASCULAR: UMA REVISÃO SISTEMÁTICA

ABSTRACT

The recognition of Cerebrovascular Disease (CVD) at earlier clinical stages may favor the control of vascular risk factors and prevention of dementia. However, operational criteria for symptomatic phases at non-dementia stages are often difficult, as the current criteria normally require the evidence of extensive subcortical disease.

OBJECTIVE

To identify the neuroimaging profile of Vascular Mild Cognitive Impairment (VaMCI), the impact of those aspects over cognition and the neuropsychological tests that distinguished VaMCI from other groups.

METHODS

Searches were performed in Scopus, ISI and PsycINFO, using the following key terms: "vascular mild cognitive impairment" OR "vascular cognitive impairment no dementia" OR "vascular cognitive impairment not demented" OR "subcortical mild cognitive impairment".

RESULTS

Of 249 papers, 20 studies were selected. Ten of those included only patients with severe White Matter Hyperintensities (WMH), whereas 10 others admitted subjects with moderate-to-severe WMH. Both groups showed poor performances in Executive Function (EF) tasks in comparison to normal controls and other diagnostic groups. Among EF tests, those assessing "complex" EF abilities consistently distinguished VaMCI from other groups, regardless of the severity of WMH. VaMCI subjects with severe or moderate-to-severe WMH showed cognitive deficits in comparison with other groups. "Complex" EF tests were the most useful in differentiating those patients from the other groups.

CONCLUSION

The occurrence of VaMCI may be associated with the presence of CVD at moderate levels; the detection of vascular damage at earlier stages may allow the adoption of therapeutic actions with significant effect-sizes.

Key words:
cerebrovascular disorders; vascular dementia; cerebral infarction; neurological diagnostic techniques

RESUMO

O reconhecimento precoce da Doença Cerebrovascular (DCV) pode permitir o controle de fatores de risco e a prevenção de demência. Contudo, critérios operacionais em seus estágios sintomáticos não-demenciais apresentam problemas, já que critérios atuais requerem a presença de extensa doença isquêmica subcortical.

OBJETIVO

Identificar o perfil de neuroimagem do Comprometimento Cognitivo Leve Vascular (CCLV), o impacto destes aspectos sobre a cognição e os testes neuropsicológicos que distinguem CCLV de outros grupos.

MÉTODOS

Foram realizadas buscas no Scopus, ISI e PsycINFO, usando a estratégia: "vascular mild cognitive impairment" OR "vascular cognitive impairment no dementia" OR "vascular cognitive impairment not demented" OR "subcortical mild cognitive impairment".

RESULTADOS

De 249 artigos, 20 foram selecionados. 10 destes incluíram apenas pacientes com hiperintensidades de substância branca (HSB) graves, enquanto 10 outros admitiram pacientes com HSB moderadas-a-graves. Ambos os grupos apresentaram desempenho pobre em tarefas de Função Executiva (FE) em comparação com controles normais e outras categorias diagnósticas. Dentre os testes de FE, aqueles que avaliam FE "complexas" diferiram consistentemente CCLV de outros grupos, independentemente da gravidade de HSB. Sujeitos com CCLV e HSB graves ou moderadas-a-graves apresentaram dificuldades cognitivas quando comparados aos demais grupos. Testes que avaliam FE "complexa" foram os mais úteis na diferenciação destes pacientes dos outros grupos.

CONCLUSÃO

A ocorrência de VaMCI pode estar associada à presença de HSB moderadas; a detecção precoce do dano vascular permitiria a adoção de medidas terapêuticas com tamanhos de efeito significativos.

Palavras-chave:
transtornos cerebrovasculares; demência vascular; infarto cerebral; técnicas de diagnóstico neurológico.

INTRODUCTION

Vascular Cognitive Impairment (VCI) is an umbrella concept which comprises a continuum of vascular-related cognitive impairment, from high-risk preclinical conditions ("brain-at-risk") to Vascular Dementia (VaD). Intermediate stages are commonly referred as Vascular Mild Cognitive Impairment (VaMCI) or Vascular Cognitive Impairment No-Dementia (Va-CIND).11. Garrett KD, Browndyke JN, Whelihan W, et al. The neuropsychological profile of vascular cognitive impairment-no dementia: comparison to patients at risk for cerebrovascular disease and vascular dementia. Arch Clin Neuropsych 2004;19:745-757.Recent operational criteria, such as the 2011 American Heart Association (AHS)/American Stroke Association (ASA) scientific statement on vascular contributions to cognitive impairment, suggested that the relationship between CVD and cognitive changes could be characterized whether through the evidence of cognitive deficits succeeding a clinical stroke or through identifying vascular lesions on neuroimaging deemed severe enough to explain the cognitive impairment.22. Gorelick PB, Scuteri A, Black SE, et al. Vascular contributions to cognitive impairment and dementia: a statement for healthcare professionals from the American Heart Association/American Stroke Association. Stroke 2011;42:2672-2713.

More detailed neuroimaging criteria have been described in the 2014 International Society for Vascular Behavioral and Cognitive Disorders (VASCOG) statement for diagnosis of Vascular Cognitive Disorders (VCD). In this document, CVD was evidenced by the presence of one of the following changes: [1] extensive and confluent subcortical White Matter Hyperintensities (WMH); [2] large-vessel infarcts: 1 (for Mild VCD) or ≥2 (for Major VCD); [3] 1 strategically placed infarct (in the thalamus or basal ganglia); [4] >2 lacunar infarcts outside the brainstem or at least 1 lacune combined with extensive WMH; and (5) intracerebral hemorrhages: ≥2 or 1 strategically placed.33. Sachdev P, Kalaria R, O'Brien J, et al. Diagnostic criteria for vascular cognitive disorders: a VASCOG statement. Alzheimer Dis Assoc Disord 2014;28:206-218.

The VASCOG statement represented a more comprehensive neuroimaging criterion in comparison to the AHA/ASA recommendations and a substantial change in relation to the Erkinjuntti's neuroimaging criteria for Subcortical Ischemic VaD (2000), in which extensive and confluent WMH or moderate WMH combined with at least 5 lacunes was required to characterize CVD.44. Erkinjuntti T, Inzitari D, Pantoni L, et al. Research criteria for subcortical vascular dementia in clinical trials. J Neural Transmission 2000; 59(Suppl 1):23-30.Nonetheless, the persistence in the new criteria of the need for extensive and confluent WMH contrasted with some studies, which have suggested that moderate WMH with less than 5 lacunes could account for cognitive impairments.55. Schmidt R, Ropele S, Ferro J, et al. Diffusion-weighted imaging and cognition in the Leukoaraiosis and Disability in the Elderly Study. Stroke 2010;41:e402-8. As indicated by several studies, mild WMH is highly prevalent among normal elderly individuals and has not been significantly associated with cognitive changes.66. O'Brien JT. Vascular cognitive impairment. Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 2006;14:724-733.

One possible advantage in identifying CVD in its mildest clinical (VaMCI) and neuroimaging (moderate subcortical WMH and less than 5 lacunes) stages is the fact that progression of vascular damage might be preventable. Early detection might allow the adoption of disease-modifying therapies that could prevent the progression of vascular lesions; therefore, it might interrupt the advance of cognitive impairment that could result in VaD. Finally, recent diagnostic criteria for Va-CIND overlap with the ASA/AHA criteria for VaMCI,77. Zhao Q, Zhou Y, Wang Y, Dong K, Wang Y. A new diagnostic algorithm for vascular cognitive impairment: the proposed criteria and evaluation of its reliability and validity. Chin Med J 2010;123:311-319.thus the term VaMCI has been used in this review to refer to both constructs.

According to the above pondering, a systematic review was undertaken aiming: [1] to assess the neuroimaging profile of individuals classified as VaMCI in clinical studies; [2] to determine whether different neuroimaging criteria impact over cognitive findings, and [3] to identify neuropsychological tests that could distinguish VaMCI from normal controls or other diagnostic groups across studies using different criteria for CVD. The authors hypothesized that the choice of establishing the threshold of brain vascular lesions into moderate or severe stages of WMH may account for divergent cognitive findings among studies.

METHODS

Data search and selection. Studies were found through searches in Scopus, ISI Web Of Knowledge and PsycINFO, using the following key terms, in all fields and published in any date: "vascular mild cognitive impairment" OR "vascular cognitive impairment no dementia" OR "vascular cognitive impairment not demented" OR "subcortical mild cognitive impairment". This search strategy was augmented with hand searches of reference lists of included studies. More articles were obtained from directly contacting authors for relevant papers.

After the searches were performed, articles were included if they were: clinical studies, which included neuroimaging data from individuals with VaMCI; that compared cognitive performances between VaMCI and other diagnostic groups [VaD, AD, non-vascular MCI (non-VaMCI)] or normal controls; and written in English, French, Spanish or Portuguese.

The authors have excluded studies that: classified individuals as VaMCI based solely on clinical/ neuropsychological aspects (e.g., studies in which the cognitive deficits were judged to have vascular cause through clinical features, such as stepwise progression, sudden onset, gait disturbances, focal neurological signs or those that applied only an ischemic score to identify the presence of cerebrovascular disease); did not assess subjects with MCI, defined as those presenting cognitive impairments that do not fulfill criteria for dementia; did not acknowledge a detailed neuroimaging criterion for the diagnosis of VaMCI (e.g., cognitive impairment considered associated with vascular lesions through subjective evaluation from an expert); did not compare cognitive performances between VaMCI and controls or other diagnostic groups; or included subjects with cortical infarction or cortical atrophy suggestive of large-vessel or neurodegenerative diseases. The current study followed the standard protocols of PRISMA statement.88. Liberati A, Altman DG, Tetzlaff J, et al. The PRISMA statement for reporting systematic reviews and meta-analyses of studies that evaluate healthcare interventions: explanation and elaboration. BMJ. 2009;339: b2700.

Data extraction. Data were extracted from full-texts by one author (FKS) and reviewed by a second author (EE). Divergences were furtherly discussed among the entire team of authors.

RESULTS

Of a total of 249 retrieved papers, 20 studies were selected for data extraction.Figure 1 summarizes the stages of data search and selection.

Figure 1
Flow-chart describing the process of study selection.

Clinical criteria for MCI. Participants in the studies presented objective cognitive deficits and preserved functional status. Mild differences included articles that identified those with cognitive impairments based on performances in screening tests for cognitive deficits (e.g., MMSE ≥ 24, CDR= 0.5, Clock Drawing Test scores lower than 2/6).99. Galluzzi S, Sheu CF, Zanetti O, Frisoni GB. Distinctive clinical features of mild cognitive impairment with subcortical cerebrovascular disease. Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord. 2005;19:196-203. 1414. Yi L, Wang J, Jia L, et al. Structural and functional changes in subcortical vascular mild cognitive impairment: a combined voxel-based morphometry and resting-state fMRI study. PLoS One 2012;7:e44758. Cognitive impairment was defined as performances 1 to 2 standards deviations (between the 16th and the 2nd percentile) below mean normative values, in some studies.1515. Kim SH, Kang HS, Kim HJ, et al. The effect of ischemic cholinergic damage on cognition in patients with subcortical vascular cognitive impairment. J Geriatr Psychiatry Neurol 2012;25:122-127. 2121. Brookes RL, Hollocks MJ, Khan U, Morris RG, Markus HS. The Brief Memory and Executive Test (BMET) for detecting vascular cognitive impairment in small vessel disease: a validation study. BMC Med 2015;13:51. Few studies, all of them prior to 2009, required impairment in memory for diagnosis of MCI;1717. Gainotti G, Ferraccioli M, Vita MG, Marra C. Patterns of neuropsychological impairment in MCI patients with small subcortical infarcts or hippocampal atrophy. J Int Neuropsychol Soc 2008;14:611-619. 2222. Frisoni GB, Galluzzi S, Bresciani L, Zanetti O, Geroldi C. Mild cognitive impairment with subcortical vascular features: clinical characteristics and outcome. J Neurol 2002;249:1423-1432. 2323. Nordahl CW, Ranganath C, Yonelinas AP, DeCarli C, Reed BR, Jagust WJ. Different mechanisms of episodic memory failure in mild cognitive impairment. Neuropsychologia. 2005;43:1688-1697. however, most papers did not include any specific cognitive domain or proposed dysexecutive symptoms as typically associated with VaMCI.

Neuroimaging criteria for subcortical vascular disease. Ten of the studies classified subcortical CVD as the presence of white-matter changes compatible with severe WMH and/or at least 5 subcortical lacunes. Five of those followed the criteria proposed by Erkinjuntti et al. (2000) for Binswanger's Disease, which requires the presence of severe WMH, periventricular lesions larger than 10 mm and deep WMH equal or over 25 mm of diameter.1111. Bella R, Ferri R, Pennisi M, et al. Enhanced motor cortex facilitation in patients with vascular cognitive impairment-no dementia. Neurosci Lett 2011;503:171-15. 1515. Kim SH, Kang HS, Kim HJ, et al. The effect of ischemic cholinergic damage on cognition in patients with subcortical vascular cognitive impairment. J Geriatr Psychiatry Neurol 2012;25:122-127. 1616. Lee MJ, Seo SW, Na DL, et al. Synergistic effects of ischemia and b-amyloid burden on cognitive decline in patients with subcortical vascular mild cognitive impairment. JAMA Psychiatry 2014;71:412-422. 2424. Shim YS, Yoon B, Shon YM, Ahn KJ, Yang DW. Difference of the hippocampal and white matter microalterations in MCI patients according to the severity of subcortical vascular changes: neuropsychological correlates of diffusion tensor imaging. Clin Neurol Neurosurg 2008; 110:552-561. 2525. Sheorajpanday RV, Mariën P, Nagels G, Weeren AJ, Saerens J, van Putten MJ, De Deyn PP. Subcortical vascular cognitive impairment, no dementia: EEG global power independently predicts vascular impairment and brain symmetry index reflects severity of cognitive decline. J Clin Neurophysiol 2014;31:422-428. A modified version of the Computerized Tomography (CT) criterion for Subcortical Vascular Dementia proposed by Erkinjuntti et al. (2000) was applied in two of the studies. CVD, in those cases, was represented by patchy or diffuse leukoaraiosis and at least one lacunar infarct on neuroimaging.99. Galluzzi S, Sheu CF, Zanetti O, Frisoni GB. Distinctive clinical features of mild cognitive impairment with subcortical cerebrovascular disease. Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord. 2005;19:196-203. 2222. Frisoni GB, Galluzzi S, Bresciani L, Zanetti O, Geroldi C. Mild cognitive impairment with subcortical vascular features: clinical characteristics and outcome. J Neurol 2002;249:1423-1432. Evidence of extensive WMH, defined as lesions larger than 3 mm of diameter in the semioval center and larger than 5 mm in the deep gray nuclei, was the criterion used in one study.2626. Fernández PJ, Campoy G, García Santos JM, et al. Is there a specific pattern of attention deficit in mild cognitive impairment with subcortical vascular features? Evidence from the Attention Network Test. Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord 2011;31:268-275. Other methods for identification of individuals with severe WMH included semiautomatic white-matter volumetry techniques. Nordahl et al. (2005) classified individuals with WMH extending for more than 19.375% of total white-matter volume as presenting severe WMH.2323. Nordahl CW, Ranganath C, Yonelinas AP, DeCarli C, Reed BR, Jagust WJ. Different mechanisms of episodic memory failure in mild cognitive impairment. Neuropsychologia. 2005;43:1688-1697. Moretti et al. (2008) computed the presence of CVD by counting voxels corresponding to WMH and identifying those individuals whose lesions corresponded to values over the fourth quartile of volume damage.1010. Moretti DV, Pievani M, Fracassi C, et al. Brain vascular damage of cholinergic pathways and EEG markers in mild cognitive impairment. J Alzheimers Dis 2008;15:357-372. Table 1 illustrates those findings.

Table 1
Studies that included severe (largely confluent) WMH and/or at least 5 lacunes for diagnosis of SVD.

Moderate WMH and/or less than 5 lacunes were deemed sufficient to characterize CVD in ten of the studies. Overall, individuals that scored 2 or more in the modified-Fazekas Scale, corresponding to the presence of moderate periventricular WMH ("smooth halo") with beginning confluent deep WMH, were selected for those studies. Identification of at least 2 lacunar infarcts was an alternative criterion for diagnosis of moderately severe cerebrovascular disease. Table 2 depicts those results.

Table 2
Studies that included moderate (beginning confluent; smooth halo) WMH and/or less than 5 lacunes required for diagnosis of SVD.

Cognitive performances and neuroimaging criteria. Alth­ough the choice of neuropsychological tests varied across studies, cognitive assessment in most cases included tasks that measured executive function (EF), memory, language and visuospatial/ visuoconstructive abilities. Table 3 summarizes the main affected cognitive abilities in the selected studies. EF has been divided into 3 components, following studies that performed a latent variable approach of multiple EF measures: "shifting" (switching between tasks), "inhibition" (deliberate overriding of prepotent responses) and "working memory/updating" (monitoring and rapidly changing new contents).2727. Miyake A, Friedman NP. The Nature and Organization of Individual Differences in Executive Functions: Four General Conclusions. Curr Dir Psychol Sci 2012;21:8-14. Tests categorized as "less specific EF tests" included tasks that assessed multiple EF dimensions (e.g., Clock Drawing Test, Verbal Fluency etc.), instead of measuring one single aspect of it.2828. Snyder HR, Miyake A, Hankin BL. Advancing understanding of executive function impairments and psychopathology: bridging the gap between clinical and cognitive approaches. Front Psychol 2015;6:328. Matching between neuropsychological tests and cognitive domains was made in accordance with evidences in the literature.2121. Brookes RL, Hollocks MJ, Khan U, Morris RG, Markus HS. The Brief Memory and Executive Test (BMET) for detecting vascular cognitive impairment in small vessel disease: a validation study. BMC Med 2015;13:51. 2828. Snyder HR, Miyake A, Hankin BL. Advancing understanding of executive function impairments and psychopathology: bridging the gap between clinical and cognitive approaches. Front Psychol 2015;6:328. 4040. Marra C, Gainotti G, Scaricamazza E, Piccininni C, Ferraccioli M, Quaranta D. The Multiple Features Target Cancellation (MFTC): an attentional visual conjunction search test. Normative values for the Italian population. Neurol Sci 2013;34:173-180. Table 4 summarizes the correspondence between cognitive domains and neuropsychological tests used in the studies.

Table 3
Summary of cognitive findings in the selected studies according with the neuroimaging criteria for CVD.
Table 4
Cognitive domains and corresponding neuropsychological tasks.

Studies using the severe WMH and/or more than 5 lacunes criteria evidenced significant differences among VaMCI, VaD and controls in EF, Memory and Visuospatial/ Visuoconstructive tasks. Tests that measured "impure" and unspecific EF dimensions, labeled herein as "less specific EF tasks", consistently distinguished VaMCI from the other groups, while Working Memory Tasks appear to be less sensitive for detection of VaMCI. As expected, performances in Memory tests identified non-VaMCI from VaMCI, but also differentiated VaMCI from controls in some studies. Global cognitive measures were more accurate in distinguishing VaMCI from controls and VaD than from non-VaMCI.

When moderate-to-severe WMH and/or less than 5 lacunes were used as criteria for CVD, EF, Memory, Visuospatial abilities tests, as well as Global Cognitive assessment, differentiated VaMCI from controls in most studies. Memory and Language tests were accurate measures in distinguishing VaMCI from non-VaMCI. Among EF dimensions, Inhibition and unspecific EF tests consistently detected VaMCI from controls in the selected studies.

DISCUSSION

The idea that VCI comprises a spectrum of different stages of vascular-related cognitive impairment may suggest that dementia can be preceded by subtle cognitive changes associated with CVD.4141. Meyer JS, Xu G, Thornby J, Chowdhury MH, Quach M. Is Mild cognitive impairment prodromal of vascular dementia like Alzheimer's disease? Stroke 2002;33:1981-1985. However, the boundaries of vascular burden that mark the earliest clinical stages of CVD still need to be defined. The importance of establishing the milder pathological clinical phase of VCI resides in the fact that early identification of cognitive decline associated with CVD might allow adequate control of vascular risk factors, so as to prevent progression to dementia. In this perspective, the adoption of the neuroimaging criteria proposed by Erkinjuntti et al. for Binswanger Disease (2000) identified cases in which white-matter injury is already extensive, that may limit the effect-sizes of prophylactic actions. The present article reviewed data suggestive of expressive cognitive changes associated with moderate-to-severe WMH and less than 5 lacunes. Identification of those subjects might allow more effective actions in preventing progression of cognitive decline.

Studies using either severe or moderate-to-severe CVD criteria demonstrated that EF performances could distinguish VaMCI from non-VaMCI, VaD and normal controls. Global and "impure" EF tasks, comprising instruments that assess multiple and complex EF abilities, such as planning, reasoning, decision-making and abstract thinking, appear to be more sensitive in discriminating VaMCI from controls than specific and "pure" EF measures, even in the group with moderate WMH. Data from functional neuroimaging studies suggested that those "higher level" EF may recruit diverse areas in the prefrontal, parietal, medial and superior temporal cortices, and subcortical structures (amygdala, thalamus and cerebellum).4242. Noveck IA, Goel V, Smith KW. The neural basis of conditional reasoning with arbitrary content. Cortex 2004;40(4-5):613-622. 4343. Gold JI, Shadlen MN. The Neural Basis of Decision Making. Ann Rev Neurosci 2007;30:535-574. These findings indicate that complex EF may result from the fine integration of many different cortical areas and subcortical regions, which depends on an extensive and delicate network of neural projections.4444. Liang P, Wang Z, Yang Y, Jia X, Li K. Functional disconnection and compensation in mild cognitive impairment: evidence from DLPFC connectivity using resting-state fMRI. PLoS One 2011;6:e22153. Moderate white-matter changes, represented by periventricular smooth halo and beginning confluent deep WMH on neuroimaging, may be sufficient to interrupt segments of inter-cortical and/or cortical-subcortical loops, leading to disconnection of areas associated with complex EF.4545. Malloy P, Correia S, Stebbins G, Laidlaw DH. Neuroimaging of white matter in aging and dementia. Clin Neuropsychol 2007;21:73-109.

On the other hand, data on the accuracy of more specific EF measures in distinguishing controls, VaMCI and non-VaMCI appeared to be inconsistent, as observed in relation to shifting tasks. Performances in inhibition tasks were significantly worse in VaMCI subjects than in controls in most of the studies with moderate-to-severe CVD. This finding might suggest an early impairment of inhibitory control in VCI patients, which is in line with a previous prospective study.4646. Jokinen H, Kalska H, Ylikoski R, et al. Longitudinal cognitive decline in subcortical ischemic vascular disease--the LADIS Study. Cerebrovasc Dis 2009;27:384-391. Interconnections among prefrontal cortex, subcortical regions and posterior areas might be interrupted in those patients, leading to loss of prefrontal inhibitory inputs over cortical-subcortical networks associated with task-irrelevant distracters.4747. Knight RT, Staines WR, Swick D, Chao LL. Prefrontal cortex regulates inhibition and excitation in distributed neural networks. Acta Psychol (Amst) 1999;101(2-3):159-178. 4848. Aron AR, Robbins TW, Poldrack RA. Inhibition and the right inferior frontal cortex. Trends Cogn Sci 2004 Apr;8:170-177. Among the severe CVD group, only two studies performed a similar analysis, showing conflicting results. Furthermore, working memory tasks were consistently inaccurate in differentiating VaMCI from non-VaMCI in most studies. Reports of impairments in working memory in amnestic MCI are abundant in the literature; thus, both Vascular and amnestic MCI might share, through different pathological mechanisms, similar prefrontal and cingulate dysfunction associated with working memory abilities.4949. Migo EM, Mitterschiffthaler M, O'Daly O, et al. Alterations in working memory networks in amnestic mild cognitive impairment. Neuropsychol Dev Cogn B Aging Neuropsychol Cogn 2015;22:106-127.

Non-executive cognitive domains were also tested in the studies. As expected, episodic memory tasks were more impaired in "atrophic" MCI than in VaMCI, in most of the studies. Yet, the finding that episodic memory performances were significantly poorer in VaMCI than in controls may highlight the role of the prefrontal cortex for the retrieval of information. Recent evidence suggested that left prefrontal cortex may participate in the recall process through the use of environmental cues and the ability to inhibit irrelevant memories during a task.5050. Dobbins IG, Foley H, Schacter DL, Wagner AD. Executive control during episodic retrieval: Multiple prefrontal processes subserve source memory. Neuron 2002;35:989-996. Also, not surprisingly, impairments in visuospatial and visuoconstructive abilities were more prominent in VaMCI than in non-VaMCI and controls. Those alterations have been associated with CVD in different studies.5151. Rasquin SM, Lodder J, Visser PJ, Lousberg R, Verhey FR. Predictive accuracy of MCI subtypes for Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia in subjects with mild cognitive impairment: A 2-year follow-up study. Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord 2005;19:113-119. 5252. Salvadori E, Poggesi A, Valenti R, et al. Operationalizing mild cognitive impairment criteria in small vessel disease: The vascular mild cognitive impairment-Tuscany study. Alzheimers Dement 2015; doi: 10.1016/j.jalz.2015.02.010.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jalz.2015.02.0...
Finally, screening tests (MMSE) and global cognitive assessment instruments (CAMCOG, BMET) identified VaMCI from controls in many studies and also from non-VaMCI in a smaller number of articles. Differently from longer neuropsychological batteries, many studies reported ceiling-effects for MMSE in samples comprising single-domain MCI subjects. However, evidence suggested that it may present similar accuracy in detecting multidomain impairments as compared with the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) and the Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination-Revised (ACE-R).5353. Pendlebury ST, Mariz J, Bull L, Mehta Z, Rothwell PM. MoCA, ACE-R, and MMSE versus the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke-Canadian Stroke Network Vascular Cognitive Impairment Harmonization Standards Neuropsychological Battery after TIA and stroke. Stroke 2012;43:464-469.

Some other issues should be addressed. Despite slight variations, specially related to the instruments used to detect cognitive impairment and to the degree of deviation from normal cognition necessary to characterize the disorder, the clinical criteria proposed by Petersen et al. for MCI (2001) were adopted almost unchanged by most of the authors.5454. Petersen RC, Doody R, Kurz A, et al. Current concepts in mild cognitive impairment. Arch Neurol 2001;58:1985-1992. This fact might indicate that, albeit past criticisms were directed to the disorder's construct validity, the use of the clinical entity described by Petersen et al. has largely prevailed among clinical studies.5555. Gauthier S, Touchon J. Mild cognitive impairment is not a clinical entity and should not be treated. Arch Neurol 2005;62:1164-1166.Conversely, other operational criteria have shown to be not optimal to identify MCI associated with CVD. Salvadori et al. (2015) reported that the criteria proposed by Winblad et al. (2004) might overlook non-amnestic MCI presentations.5252. Salvadori E, Poggesi A, Valenti R, et al. Operationalizing mild cognitive impairment criteria in small vessel disease: The vascular mild cognitive impairment-Tuscany study. Alzheimers Dement 2015; doi: 10.1016/j.jalz.2015.02.010.
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jalz.2015.02.0...

There are limitations in this review that need to be commented. Different terminologies used to describe periventricular and deep WMH and imprecise expressions (e.g., "patchy WMH", "diffuse WMH", "smooth halo" and "caps"), present in different criteria make it difficult to compare lesion loads across studies. Furthermore, the characterization of periventricular/deep WMH itself has been object of divergence by some authors, who adopted different distances between the ventricle's margin and the lesion to define it as "periventricular" or "deep".5656. Schmidt R, Fazekas F, Kleinert G, et al. Magnetic resonance imaging signal hyperintensities in the deep and subcortical white matter. A comparative study between stroke patients and normal volunteers. Archiv Neurol 1992;49:825-827. 5757. Scheltens P, Barkhof F, Leys D, et al. A semiquantative rating scale for the assessment of signal hyperintensities on magnetic resonance imaging. J Neurol Sci 1993;114:7-12. Moreover, tasks classified as assessing a specific aspect of EF may not be pure measures of that process, since they commonly require other EF and non-EF features. Models of EF as a unique or multiple constructs have been proposed and there is no agreement regarding neuropsychological tests that may thoroughly assess all of its aspects. Further studies using confirmatory factor-analysis of EF measures may allow the establishment of cognitive batteries comprising tests that evaluate complementary processes of EF.

The present review evidenced that the choice of neuroimaging criteria to characterize CVD in MCI subjects did not result in groups with different cognitive profiles. One possible hypothesis is the complex nature of subcortical disease, in which vascular and non-vascular (e.g., Alzheimer's disease, multiple sclerosis) events often interact, ultimately resulting in WM disconnection and cognitive impairment.5857. Nordlund A, Göthlin M, Wallin A. Vascular disease, Alzheimer's disease biomarkers and cognition in mild cognitive impairment: additive or synergetic effects? Dement Geriatr Cogn Disord 2011;32:250-256. 5959. Nordlund A, Rolstad S, Klang O, Lind K, Hansen S, Wallin A. Cognitive profiles of mild cognitive impairment with and without vascular disease. Neuropsychology 2007;21:706-712. In addition, as suggested by Pasi et al. (2015), that may also be due to the fact that cognitive tests may lose their accuracy in distinguishing groups of patients once certain degree of vascular lesions is reached.6060. PASI M, SALVADORI E, POGGESI A, ET AL. WHITE MATTER MICROSTRUCTURAL DAMAGE IN SMALL VESSEL DISEASE IS ASSOCIATED WITH MONTREAL COGNITIVE ASSESSMENT BUT NOT WITH MINI MENTAL STATE EXAMINATION PERFORMANCES: VASCULAR MILD COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT TUSCANY STUDY. STROKE 2015; 46: 262-264.

In conclusion, evidence in the literature suggested that the use of moderate-to-severe WMH and less than 5 lacunar infarcts as the earliest pathological neuroimaging presentation of CVD appear to be appropriate. Future operational criteria for VCI, especially for VaMCI, should place more emphasis in the clinical relevance of the early diagnosis. As mentioned, this measure may allow early intervention over risk-factors, with opportune effect in preventing progression to VaD.

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  • Support. Conselho Nacional de Pesquisa (CNPq) for the support to Jerson Laks, who is a Researcher 2 of this council. Fundação de Apoio à Pesquisa do Estado do Rio de Janeiro (FAPERJ): APQ1 (Proc. 111.327/2014).
  • 4
    This study was conducted at the Instituto de Psiquiatria, Universidade Federal do Rio de Janeiro

Publication Dates

  • Publication in this collection
    Oct-Dec 2015

History

  • Received
    09 Sept 2015
  • Accepted
    15 Nov 2015
Academia Brasileira de Neurologia, Departamento de Neurologia Cognitiva e Envelhecimento R. Vergueiro, 1353 sl.1404 - Ed. Top Towers Offices, Torre Norte, São Paulo, SP, Brazil, CEP 04101-000, Tel.: +55 11 5084-9463 | +55 11 5083-3876 - São Paulo - SP - Brazil
E-mail: revistadementia@abneuro.org.br | demneuropsy@uol.com.br