Purpose: Here, we combined a longitudinal design to assess whole-brain hyper- and hypo-connectivity in the different clinical phases of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) with a multimodal approach to understand how such connectivity changes were related to glucose hypometabolism. Methods: We selected a longitudinal cohort of N = 66 subjects with clinical, cerebrospinal fluid and FDG-PET assessments, from Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) database. N = 31 AD individuals were assessed at three stages: mild cognitive impairment (AD-MCI, T0), early phase of dementia (mild-AD, T1) and dementia (AD-D, T2). We included N = 35 age/sex-matched healthy controls. We assessed longitudinal metabolic connectivity using Pearson’s correlation, clustering analysis and graph theory metrics. Results: In the MCI-AD stages, hypo- and hyper-connectivity coexisted. Data-driven, longitudinal clustering analysis identified specific pathological clusters: a default mode network cluster, with prevalent hypo-connectivity and severe, persistent hypometabolism; a limbic cluster showing hyper-connectivity and steeper metabolic decline. Metabolism in hyper-connected limbic regions showed a mediation effect on worsening of AD-like parieto-temporal hypometabolism and predicted faster conversion to dementia. Conclusion: Hypo- and hyper-connectivity, especially in early stages, may have different roles in AD neurodegenerative processes, with metabolism in hyper-connected regions acting as a mediator on the neurodegeneration of core regions of AD pathology.

Galli, A., Inglese, M., Presotto, L., Malito, R., Di, X., Toschi, N., et al. (2025). Glucose metabolism in hyper-connected regions predicts neurodegeneration and speed of conversion in Alzheimer’s disease. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE AND MOLECULAR IMAGING, 52(12), 4639-4651 [10.1007/s00259-025-07379-9].

Glucose metabolism in hyper-connected regions predicts neurodegeneration and speed of conversion in Alzheimer’s disease

Presotto L.;
2025

Abstract

Purpose: Here, we combined a longitudinal design to assess whole-brain hyper- and hypo-connectivity in the different clinical phases of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) with a multimodal approach to understand how such connectivity changes were related to glucose hypometabolism. Methods: We selected a longitudinal cohort of N = 66 subjects with clinical, cerebrospinal fluid and FDG-PET assessments, from Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) database. N = 31 AD individuals were assessed at three stages: mild cognitive impairment (AD-MCI, T0), early phase of dementia (mild-AD, T1) and dementia (AD-D, T2). We included N = 35 age/sex-matched healthy controls. We assessed longitudinal metabolic connectivity using Pearson’s correlation, clustering analysis and graph theory metrics. Results: In the MCI-AD stages, hypo- and hyper-connectivity coexisted. Data-driven, longitudinal clustering analysis identified specific pathological clusters: a default mode network cluster, with prevalent hypo-connectivity and severe, persistent hypometabolism; a limbic cluster showing hyper-connectivity and steeper metabolic decline. Metabolism in hyper-connected limbic regions showed a mediation effect on worsening of AD-like parieto-temporal hypometabolism and predicted faster conversion to dementia. Conclusion: Hypo- and hyper-connectivity, especially in early stages, may have different roles in AD neurodegenerative processes, with metabolism in hyper-connected regions acting as a mediator on the neurodegeneration of core regions of AD pathology.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
Glucose metabolism; Graph theory; Hyper-connectivity; Hypo-connectivity; Mild cognitive impairment; Prodromal;
English
5-giu-2025
2025
52
12
4639
4651
none
Galli, A., Inglese, M., Presotto, L., Malito, R., Di, X., Toschi, N., et al. (2025). Glucose metabolism in hyper-connected regions predicts neurodegeneration and speed of conversion in Alzheimer’s disease. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF NUCLEAR MEDICINE AND MOLECULAR IMAGING, 52(12), 4639-4651 [10.1007/s00259-025-07379-9].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/575002
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