Symptom‐led staging for semantic and non‐fluent/agrammatic variants of primary progressive aphasia

INTRODUCTION Here we set out to create a symptom‐led staging system for the canonical semantic and non‐fluent/agrammatic variants of primary progressive aphasia (PPA), which present unique diagnostic and management challenges not well captured by functional scales developed for Alzheimer's dise...

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Veröffentlicht in:Alzheimer's & dementia 2024-01, Vol.20 (1), p.195-210
Hauptverfasser: Hardy, Chris J. D., Taylor‐Rubin, Cathleen, Taylor, Beatrice, Harding, Emma, Gonzalez, Aida Suarez, Jiang, Jessica, Thompson, Laura, Kingma, Rachel, Chokesuwattanaskul, Anthipa, Walker, Ffion, Barker, Suzie, Brotherhood, Emilie, Waddington, Claire, Wood, Olivia, Zimmermann, Nikki, Kupeli, Nuriye, Yong, Keir X. X., Camic, Paul M., Stott, Joshua, Marshall, Charles R., Oxtoby, Neil P., Rohrer, Jonathan D., Volkmer, Anna, Crutch, Sebastian J., Warren, Jason D.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:INTRODUCTION Here we set out to create a symptom‐led staging system for the canonical semantic and non‐fluent/agrammatic variants of primary progressive aphasia (PPA), which present unique diagnostic and management challenges not well captured by functional scales developed for Alzheimer's disease and other dementias. METHODS An international PPA caregiver cohort was surveyed on symptom development under six provisional clinical stages and feedback was analyzed using a mixed‐methods sequential explanatory design. RESULTS Both PPA syndromes were characterized by initial communication dysfunction and non‐verbal behavioral changes, with increasing syndromic convergence and functional dependency at later stages. Milestone symptoms were distilled to create a prototypical progression and severity scale of functional impairment: the PPA Progression Planning Aid (“PPA‐Squared”). DISCUSSION This work introduces a symptom‐led staging scheme and functional scale for semantic and non‐fluent/agrammatic variants of PPA. Our findings have implications for diagnostic and care pathway guidelines, trial design, and personalized prognosis and treatment for PPA. Highlights We introduce new symptom‐led perspectives on primary progressive aphasia (PPA). The focus is on non‐fluent/agrammatic (nfvPPA) and semantic (svPPA) variants. Foregrounding of early and non‐verbal features of PPA and clinical trajectories is featured. We introduce a symptom‐led staging scheme for PPA. We propose a prototype for a functional impairment scale, the PPA Progression Planning Aid.
ISSN:1552-5260
1552-5279
1552-5279
DOI:10.1002/alz.13415