Differential neuropsychological profile of ALS patients with and without C9orf72 mutation.

2020 
OBJECTIVE To determine whether the neuropsychological profiles of ALS patients with (ALSC9+) and without (ALSC9-) C9orf72 expansion are different we administered a battery of neuropsychological tests to 741 ALS patients (68 ALSC9+ and 673 ALSC9-) and 129 controls. METHODS The study population includes 741 ALS patients who were consecutively diagnosed at the Turin ALS expert center in the period 2010-2018 and who underwent both cognitive/behavioral and genetic testing. Patients' neuropsychological patterns were compared (1) at the same degree of cognitive and behavioral deficit according to the revised ALS-FTD Consensus Criteria; and (2) at the same level of motor impairment according to the King's staging system. RESULTS Despite being about 7 years younger, ALSC9+ patients had significant lower scores in tests exploring executive functions, and verbal memory both when classified as cognitively normal and when diagnosed in the intermediate cognitive categories. Considering the clinical perspective, ALSC9+ patients showed significantly lower scores compared to ALSC9- patients at King's stage 1 and 3 in almost all the examined neuropsychological domains, while at King's stage 2 ALSC9+ patients were more severely affected only in the verbal memory domain. Behavioral function was comparably impaired in the 2 cohorts. CONCLUSIONS ALSC9+ patients show a different neuropsychological profile compared to ALSC9- ones, being more impaired in executive functions and verbal memory domains at all King's stages. Verbal memory emerged as a particularly vulnerable function in ALSC9+, with worse performances even when patients were still classified as cognitively normal.
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