Abstract
The presence of age‐related neuropathology characteristic of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) in people with Down syndrome (DS) is well‐established. However, the early symptoms of dementia may be atypical and appear related to dysfunction of prefrontal circuitry.
Objective
To characterize the initial informant reported age‐related neuropsychiatric symptoms of dementia in people with DS, and their relationship to AD and frontal lobe function.
Methods
Non‐amnestic informant reported symptoms (disinhibition, apathy, and executive dysfunction) and amnestic symptoms from the CAMDEX‐DS informant interview were analyzed in a cross‐sectional cohort of 162 participants with DS over 30 years of age, divided into three groups: stable cognition, prodromal dementia, and AD. To investigate age‐related symptoms prior to evidence of prodromal dementia we stratified the stable cognition group by age.
Results
Amnestic and non‐amnestic symptoms were present before evidence of informant‐reported cognitive decline. In those who received the diagnosis of AD, symptoms tended to be more marked. Memory impairments were more marked in the prodromal dementia than the stable cognition group (OR = 35.07; P < .001), as was executive dysfunction (OR = 7.16; P < .001). Disinhibition was greater in the AD than in the prodromal dementia group (OR = 3.54; P = .04). Apathy was more pronounced in the AD than in the stable cognition group (OR = 34.18; P < .001).
Conclusion
Premorbid amnestic and non‐amnestic symptoms as reported by informants increase with the progression to AD. For the formal diagnosis of AD in DS this progression of symptoms needs to be taken into account. An understanding of the unique clinical presentation of DS in AD should inform treatment options.