F rontotemporal lobar degeneration presents as one of three major clinical syndromes
1 : frontal-variant frontotemporal dementia (fvFTD),
2 semantic dementia (sometimes referred to as primary progressive fluent aphasia or temporal-variant FTD), and progressive nonfluent aphasia. Despite frontotemporal lobar degeneration being the cause of 12.5–16.5% of all degenerative-type dementias,
3 there is a shortage of research to elucidate its underlying mechanisms, and there are few studies that have evaluated the effectiveness of pharmacological treatments to improve the symptoms of frontotemporal lobar degeneration. There is currently no standard pharmacological intervention for the treatment of frontotemporal lobar degeneration and no known treatment to delay its progression; however, there are various prescribed medications that are commonly used to help alleviate some symptoms.
Due to the heterogeneity in the clinical presentation of the syndromes comprising frontotemporal lobar degeneration, this article will focus on fvFTD. We will first characterize the clinical presentation of fvFTD, followed by an overview of the underlying neuropathology. We shall then review the research literature on the pharmacological agents that have been studied to ameliorate the behavioral and cognitive changes associated with FTD, as well as explore future directions.
Clinical Presentation
Each of the major syndromes constituting frontotemporal lobar degeneration has its own common clinical presentation.
4 Although semantic dementia and progressive nonfluent aphasia present with prominent language abnormalities at the onset of the disease course, fvFTD initially presents with a personality change and behavioral abnormalities. The behavioral features, which are seen early in fvFTD, may include the loss of personal and social awareness, disinhibition, poor insight, impulsivity, stereotypies, and hyperorality. Furthermore, the inability to recognize emotion—in particular anger and disgust—the inability to empathize with others, and the impaired moral reasoning that are observed in fvFTD patients closely resemble the profile of persons with antisocial personality disorder.
5 These patients may exhibit psychosis,
3 increased risk-taking behavior,
6 compulsions,
7 –
12 and apathy.
13 Although the behavioral abnormalities worsen with disease progression, many of the behavioral deficits lessen with increased apathy and withdrawal. Moreover, as the disease progresses, these patients are at risk for developing changes to the motor system, such as motor neuron disease, parkinsonism, and dysphagia, although motor neuron disease can precede the manifestations of fvFTD.
14In addition to behavioral abnormalities, fvFTD is associated with cognitive deficits. For instance, patients may display great impairment in executive function
15,
16 and at varying points in the disease course may
15,
17,
18 or may not
19 present with memory impairments. Furthermore, prominent attentional deficits may be present.
15,
16Importantly, the symptoms of fvFTD are more related to the affected areas of the brain than to specific neuropathological factors.
4 Consequently, the degree of frontal versus temporal compromise can account for much of the variability in the clinical presentations of the disorder.
20 In addition, patients with greater right hemispheric compromise show more pronounced impairment in social cognition. Moreover, although patients may initially present with features that are consistent with one particular frontotemporal lobar degeneration subtype, as the disease progresses, their clinical profile may be more consistent with a different subtype.
21 This is not to say that the profile switches from one subtype to another; rather, the new profile is an add-on to the initial one. However, the new profile may still be more prominent than the initial one. For example, a patient may initially be diagnosed with fvFTD but may later present with semantic dementia as his or her condition progresses. Therefore, the clinical presentation of fvFTD is heterogeneous within a population of patients and may vary within a particular patient.
Pathological Indicators of FTD and Disease-Modifying Interventions
To date, medications used to treat FTD do not delay the progression of the disease. However, several neuropathological features of the various forms of FTD are identified and implicate possible targets for disease-modifying therapies. These features include ubiquitin inclusions, progranulin mutations, and tau mutations.
FTD with ubiquinated inclusions (FTD-U, also referred to as FTLD-U), including FTD with motor neuron disease, constitutes the most common neuropathologies in frontotemporal lobar degeneration. Ubiquinated inclusions consist primarily of a protein called TAR DNA-binding protein 43 kDA (TDP-43).
69 Less common are tauopathies, such as Pick’s disease, corticobasal degeneration, and progressive supranuclear palsy.
21Frontotemporal dementia with motor neuron disease is highly heritable
70 and appears to be associated with an unidentified gene on chromosome 9p.
71,
72 Therefore, this gene and its protein product(s) are potential disease-modifying targets, as are the genetic and biochemical pathways involving TDP-43.
Another pathological correlate of FTD that occurs in most cases without motor neuron disease is the result of genetic mutations that cause a loss of function in the progranulin (PRGN) gene,
73,
74 where progranulin is a pleiotropic protein involved in mediating neuronal development and inflammation.
75 Postmortem, these patients have FTD with ubiquinated inclusions/TDP-43 pathology, which implicates the potential efficacy of PRGN-altering therapies. Such treatments may act by normalizing PRGN gene expression, by enhancing progranulin posttranslational modification, or by introducing exogenous progranulin into the brains of FTD patients with PRGN mutations. These therapies may even be useful for patients without such mutations.
14Lastly, according to a review paper on FTD,
76 the most common histological feature of the disease, in cases that meet the strict clinical criteria for fvFTD,
1 is tauopathy, where the microtubule-associated protein tau aggregates in a hyperphosphorylated form. Mutant forms of tau have been found to exist in 30%–42% of FTD cases at autopsy.
77 –
79 These aggregates disrupt normal cellular function and lead to cell death and loss of synapses. The altered levels of tau and its deposition may result from alterations in splicing, tau expression levels, and posttranslational processing.
80To study the mechanisms of neurodegeneration in diseases with abnormal changes in tau, a group of investigators generated several cell models of tauopathy.
81 They created neuroblastoma cell lines that could inducibly express different variants of the repeat domain of tau (tau
RD ), including a repeat domain with the deletion mutation ΔK280. This mutation is known to exist in FTD and is very prone to spontaneously aggregate. The researchers confirmed that the tau
RD is toxic to cells and observed that fragmentation of the tau
RD precedes aggregation, suggesting that fragmentation, rather than phosphorylation, is important for aggregation. Fragmentation can be inhibited by treating the cells with various inhibitors, thereby preventing aggregation. Importantly, preventing tau aggregation, even without altering its expression, can reduce toxicity to cells.
The findings from this study
81 have important clinical implications, despite its limitations. The results suggest the viability of incorporating inhibitors in pharmacological agents to prevent the toxic aggregation of tau in FTD. However, before attempting to apply these results clinically, it is important to remember that the tauopathy that underlies fvFTD is heterogeneous, which may limit the utility of disease-modifying treatments directed at tau.
14 Additionally, this study was conducted on cells
in vitro, therefore, these results may not necessarily be observed
in vivo . Of course, one must also take into consideration obstacles such as the blood-brain barrier and selectivity and specificity for the target when designing a disease-modifying agent. Medications like the anticancer drug paclitaxel, which is designed to stabilize microtubules, are currently being evaluated.
82 A randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial evaluated methylthioninium chloride, a tau aggregation inhibitor, and found that it stabilized the progression of Alzheimer’s disease in mild and moderate Alzheimer’s disease patients.
83 Perhaps FTD patients would benefit from methylthioninium chloride treatment as well. Other inhibitors and microtubule tau stabilizers are showing positive results in
in vitro and animal studies.
84 –
86Conclusions, Limitations, and Future Directions
Frontotemporal dementia is a relatively common cause of dementia and accounts for most of the dementia cases in late middle-aged adults. At the time of disease onset, many people are in the middle of their working years,
87 and the rapid decline in their functioning puts great burden on both their families and the health care system, as many people with FTD are institutionalized 1 year following the diagnosis.
88 Despite the relative lack of cognitive treatments for FTD, there are several options for treating some of the behavioral manifestations of the disease. Given the evidence, SSRIs and trazodone appear to be the best first options for treatment. Nevertheless, more research must be completed to ensure that those with FTD are diagnosed and treated early in their disease course in the hopes of delaying the progression of the disease and to delay institutionalization.
An essential element for the early detection of FTD is the use of standardized assessment tools, as there are currently none specific to this disease. One study demonstrated that early in the course of the disease, the brains of FTD patients contain lesions in the orbitofrontal cortex, superior medial frontal cortex, and the hippocampus.
89 Dysfunctions in the orbitofrontal cortex and in the medial frontal cortex underlie social cognitive deficits,
90,
91 yet most neuropsychological tests are primarily sensitive to dorsolateral frontal dysfunction and have low sensitivity to early FTD. This illustrates the need for behavioral and neuropsychological measures that are sensitive to lesions in the orbitofrontal and medial frontal cortices, as well as tests of social cognition such as measures of Theory of Mind.
92Another factor involved in the early detection of FTD is the initial difficulty clinicians may have in distinguishing it from other forms of dementia. Fortunately, various forms of dementia may be reliably differentiated from one another when various behavioral rating scales are employed, such as the Cambridge Behavioral Inventory
93 and the FBI.
94,
95 There are mixed results regarding the utility of the NPI in discriminating various forms of dementia.
94,
95 Additionally, behavioral measures have been demonstrated to have superior sensitivity over cognitive measures in diagnosing FTD.
96Furthermore, early diagnosis may be possible with the use of neuroimaging technology. For example, positron emission tomography (PET) research illustrates the ubiquitous dysfunction in the ventromedial frontal cortex of FTD patients,
97 a region highly implicated in the clinical presentation of FTD.
It is interesting to note that while patients with frontotemporal lobar degeneration are diagnosed based on clinical criteria that suggest which region of the brain is most affected, neuroimaging data may suggest primary dysfunction in a different region. This occurs due to lack of an exclusive relation between the syndrome and the distribution of pathological change, which is generally measured as atrophy.
98 For example, patients with semantic dementia invariably have temporal lobe atrophy, but such atrophy does not guarantee neuropsychological findings of language dysfunction. Similarly, patients with fvFTD invariably possess frontal-lobe atrophy and temporal-lobe atrophy, yet the atrophy in the temporal lobe may be greater than in the frontal lobe, and the patients may not display obvious semantic impairment. Therefore, these examples demonstrate the importance of recognizing that despite the usefulness of neuroimaging as a diagnostic aid, it could lead to an incorrect clinical diagnosis if the results were given undue weight in differential diagnosis.
An issue that has created inconsistencies in the FTD literature is the operational definition as to which patients classify as FTD. This varies from study to study. Some studies use the term FTD as the broad superordinate term to encompass the three major syndromes (FTD, semantic dementia, and progressive nonfluent aphasia), while others use the term frontotemporal lobar degeneration. Although the authors clearly define their classification system, it is not always mentioned how many patients comprise each subtype. This makes it difficult, for example, to ascertain the potential use of a particular treatment for a patient with a particular frontotemporal lobar degeneration syndrome.
Researchers choose from a plethora of outcome measures to determine whether a particular intervention is successful. This creates the challenge of accurately comparing various studies’ results to one another. Some of the measures used in FTD treatment studies are the MMSE, the NPI, the FBI, and the FTD Inventory (see Freedman
99 for a review). Interestingly, the studies discussed throughout this article rarely observed any changes in cognition and have made the argument that the cognitive impairment may be refractory to treatment. However, noting that the MMSE, a measure commonly utilized to evaluate cognitive change in FTD studies, is not sensitive to the prominent executive impairment found in FTD patients, any changes in cognition that may have occurred as a result of treatment may be undetected.
Another issue is that there is variability in what constitutes a significant change or improvement. For instance, a statistically significant improvement has been defined as being a total score reduction of 50% on the NPI,
52 whereas elsewhere, improvement on the NPI has been defined as posttreatment scores being significantly different from baseline.
41 Clearly, in order to properly compare the results of individual studies and, in turn, accurately evaluate therapeutic effectiveness, investigators should be consistent in their choices of outcome measures and should standardize what constitutes a statistically significant and clinically relevant improvement on any given measure.
Finally, given the considerable prevalence of FTD, and the relative paucity of pharmacological trials for it, funding agencies should give high priority to financing research aimed at improving early FTD detection and at evaluating the most appropriate forms of treatment. Future studies need to have rigorous experimental designs, include a sufficient sample size, and employ an intent-to-treat analysis to account for participants who fail to complete the protocol. This would strengthen the conclusions from these studies, thereby improving the ability of physicians and other caregivers to provide optimal care for patients living with FTD.
Acknowledgments
During the preparation of this article, Mr. E.D. Kaye was supported by the Scace Graduate Fellowship for Research in Alzheimer’s, Finkler Graduate Student Fellowship, Harry C. Sharpe Fellowship, and University of Toronto Institute of Medical Science Fellowship; Dr. M. Freedman held a research grant from the Canadian Institute of Health Research and was supported by the Saul A. Silverman Family Foundation, Toronto, Ontario, Canada, as part of a Canada International Scientific Exchange Program (CISEPO) project, and has received support from Eli Lilly (Research Funds), Pfizer Canada (Advisory Board, CME Speaker, Research Funds), Janssen-Ortho Inc. (Advisory Board, CME Speaker), Lundbeck Canada (CME Speaker), Novartis (Advisory Board, CME Speaker), and Wyeth Canada (Advisory Panel); and Dr. N.P.L.G. Verhoeff held a New Investigator Research Grant from the Alzheimer’s Association (NIRG-04-1181) and has received an honorarium from Janssen-Ortho Inc. (Advisory Board).