Progression of Amyloid Accumulation in Late Adulthood Among People With Childhood-Onset Epilepsy
Previous research has demonstrated increased brain amyloid plaque load in individuals with childhood-onset epilepsy in late middle age. However, the trajectory of this process is not yet known. The aim of this study was to determine whether individuals with a history of childhood-onset epilepsy show...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Neurology 2025-02, Vol.104 (3), p.e210303 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Previous research has demonstrated increased brain amyloid plaque load in individuals with childhood-onset epilepsy in late middle age. However, the trajectory of this process is not yet known. The aim of this study was to determine whether individuals with a history of childhood-onset epilepsy show progressive brain aging in amyloid accumulation in late adulthood (Turku Adult Childhood-Onset Epilepsy study, TACOE).
Adults from a prospective population-based cohort of individuals with childhood-onset epilepsy, originally recruited 1961-1964, together with matched controls, were scanned with [
C]PIB PET twice: after at least 50 years (TACOE-50) and again after at least 55 years (TACOE-55) from the diagnosis.
At TACOE-55, 31.4% (11/36, mean age 63.3 years, 52.8% female) of individuals from the epilepsy group and 11.4% (4/35, 63.1 year, 54.3%) of controls had a visually abnormal [
C]PIB scan (
= 0.039). At TACOE-55, cortical brain [
C]PIB uptakes were higher and increased more from TACOE-50 in the epilepsy compared with the control group (
< 0.05). In voxelwise whole-brain analyses, the epilepsy group showed significantly higher and more widespread brain amyloid accumulation (
< 0.05).
The results demonstrate that childhood-onset epilepsy is associated with an earlier age at onset of amyloidosis and greater progressive amyloid accumulation in late adulthood. |
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ISSN: | 0028-3878 1526-632X 1526-632X |
DOI: | 10.1212/WNL.0000000000210303 |