Gwenaelle Douaud1,
Ricarda Menke1, Achim Gass2, Andreas Monsch3,
Marc Sollberger2,3, Anil Rao4,
1FMRIB Centre,
University of Oxford, Oxford, Oxfordshire, United Kingdom; 2Departments
of Neurology & Neuroradiology, University Hospital Basel, Switzerland; 3Memory
Clinic, Department of Geriatrics, University Hospital Basel, Switzerland; 4GlaxoSmithKline,Clinical
Imaging Centre, Hammersmith Hospital
London
We investigated for the first time grey and white matter differences at baseline between stable amnestic MCI patients and those who later converted to AD. Importantly, we focused on late conversion, as patients converted at least two years after their scan. Using FSL-VBM and TBSS, we found significantly reduced GM mainly in the striatum and the left hippocampus and increased FA where the SLF crosses the CST in the MCI converters. Remarkably, these white matter microstructural alterations detected in crossing-fibre tracts using diffusion imaging proved more sensitive to predict conversion to AD.