@article{LombardiMayerSemleretal.2021, author = {Lombardi, Jolina and Mayer, Benjamin and Semler, Elisa and Anderl-Straub, Sarah and Uttner, Ingo and Kassubek, Jan and Diehl-Schmid, Janine and Danek, Adrian and Levin, Johannes and Fassbender, Klaus and Fliessbach, Klaus and Schneider, Anja and Huppertz, Hans-J{\"u}rgen and Jahn, Holger and Volk, Alexander and Kornhuber, Johannes and Landwehrmeyer, Bernhard and Lauer, Martin and Prudlo, Johannes and Wiltfang, Jens and Schroeter, Matthias L. and Ludolph, Albert and Otto, Markus}, title = {Quantifying progression in primary progressive aphasia with structural neuroimaging}, series = {Alzheimer's \& Dementia}, volume = {17}, journal = {Alzheimer's \& Dementia}, number = {10}, doi = {10.1002/alz.12323}, url = {http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bvb:20-opus-262605}, pages = {1595 -- 1609}, year = {2021}, abstract = {Introduction The term primary progressive aphasia (PPA) sums up the non-fluent (nfv), the semantic (sv), and the logopenic (lv) variant. Up to now, there is only limited data available concerning magnetic resonance imaging volumetry to monitor disease progression. Methods Structural brain imaging and an extensive assessment were applied at baseline and up to 4-year(s) follow-up in 269 participants. With automated atlas-based volumetry 56 brain regions were assessed. Atrophy progression served to calculate sample sizes for therapeutic trials. Results At baseline highest atrophy appeared in parts of the left frontal lobe for nfvPPA (-17\%) and of the left temporal lobe for svPPA (-34\%) and lvPPA (-24\%). Severest progression within 1-year follow-up occurred in the basal ganglia in nfvPPA (-7\%), in the hippocampus/amygdala in svPPA (-9\%), and in (medial) temporal regions in lvPPA (-6\%). Conclusion PPA presents as a left-dominant, mostly gray matter sensitive disease with considerable atrophy at baseline that proceeds variant-specific.}, language = {en} }