Visual dysfunction is a better predictor than retinal thickness for dementia in Parkinson's disease.

Naomi Hannaway ORCID logo; AngelikiZarkali; Louise-AnnLeyland; FionBremner; Jennifer M Nicholas ORCID logo; Siegfried KWagner; MatthewRoig; Pearse AKeane; AhmedToosy; JeremyChataway; +1 more... Rimona Sharon Weil ORCID logo; (2023) Visual dysfunction is a better predictor than retinal thickness for dementia in Parkinson's disease. Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry. ISSN 0022-3050 DOI: 10.1136/jnnp-2023-331083
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BACKGROUND: Dementia is a common and devastating symptom of Parkinson's disease (PD). Visual function and retinal structure are both emerging as potentially predictive for dementia in Parkinson's but lack longitudinal evidence. METHODS: We prospectively examined higher order vision (skew tolerance and biological motion) and retinal thickness (spectral domain optical coherence tomography) in 100 people with PD and 29 controls, with longitudinal cognitive assessments at baseline, 18 months and 36 months. We examined whether visual and retinal baseline measures predicted longitudinal cognitive scores using linear mixed effects models and whether they predicted onset of dementia, death and frailty using time-to-outcome methods. RESULTS: Patients with PD with poorer baseline visual performance scored lower on a composite cognitive score (β=0.178, SE=0.05, p=0.0005) and showed greater decreases in cognition over time (β=0.024, SE=0.001, p=0.013). Poorer visual performance also predicted greater probability of dementia (χ² (1)=5.2, p=0.022) and poor outcomes (χ² (1) =10.0, p=0.002). Baseline retinal thickness of the ganglion cell-inner plexiform layer did not predict cognitive scores or change in cognition with time in PD (β=-0.013, SE=0.080, p=0.87; β=0.024, SE=0.001, p=0.12). CONCLUSIONS: In our deeply phenotyped longitudinal cohort, visual dysfunction predicted dementia and poor outcomes in PD. Conversely, retinal thickness had less power to predict dementia. This supports mechanistic models for Parkinson's dementia progression with onset in cortical structures and shows potential for visual tests to enable stratification for clinical trials.



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