Poster (Scientific congresses, symposiums and conference proceedings)
The Impact of Non-Motor Symptoms on Diagnostic Delay in Parkinson’s Disease
Tom, Hähnel; Raschka, Tamara; Klucken, Jochen et al.
202497. Kongress der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Neurologie (DGN-Kongress 2024)
Peer reviewed
 

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Keywords :
Parkinson's disease; Non-Motor Symptoms; diagnosis; mixed-effects model
Abstract :
[en] Background: Parkinson’s disease (PD) is characterized by a wide range of motor and non-motor symptoms. Broader biological definitions of PD are discussed and receive increasing attention, going beyond the current motor-centered PD definition. The heterogeneity of non-motor PD symptoms poses a challenge for early and accurate diagnosis of PD. Objectives: The main objective of this study is to evaluate systematically whether non-motor symptoms affect the timing of PD diagnosis. This is accomplished by modeling disease progression in large-scale longitudinal data. Question: The project aims to determine whether specific non-motor symptoms of people with PD systematically delay or hasten the diagnosis compared to the typical time point of PD diagnosis. Methods: This study utilized data from three large PD cohorts and analyzed it through a latent time joint mixed-effects model (LTJMM). This approach allows an alignment of disease trajectories of individual people with PD on a common disease time scale, and subsequently the determination of whether diagnoses were made earlier or later than the cohort’s average diagnosis time. Initial clinical symptoms at the typical diagnosis time were estimated using several mixed-effects models, depending on the scales of the outcomes. Non-motor scores were grouped into 12 distinct non-motor domains and pooled estimates were calculated across all three cohorts using three-level meta-analyses with random effects. Pvalues were corrected for multiple testing using Benjamini-Hochberg procedure. Results: The analysis included 1,124 individuals diagnosed with PD. Several non-motor symptoms were found to contribute to a diagnosis later than the average: anxiety (p=0.0043), autonomic dysfunction (p=0.0019), depression (p=0.0004), fatigue (p=0.012), pain (p=0.0085), sleep disturbances (p=0.0043), and a higher overall burden of non-motor symptoms (p=0.0006, Fig. 1). In contrast, impulsivity (p=0.12), REM sleep behavior disorder (p=0.28), apathy (p=0.32), hyposmia (p=0.79), and hallucinations (p=0.09) did not impact diagnostic delay.
Research center :
Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB): Biomedical Data Science (Glaab Group)
Disciplines :
Neurology
Life sciences: Multidisciplinary, general & others
Human health sciences: Multidisciplinary, general & others
Author, co-author :
Tom, Hähnel
Raschka, Tamara
Klucken, Jochen
GLAAB, Enrico  ;  University of Luxembourg > Luxembourg Centre for Systems Biomedicine (LCSB) > Biomedical Data Science
Corvol, Jean-Christophe
Falkenburger, Björn
Fröhlich, Holger
External co-authors :
yes
Language :
English
Title :
The Impact of Non-Motor Symptoms on Diagnostic Delay in Parkinson’s Disease
Publication date :
2024
Event name :
97. Kongress der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Neurologie (DGN-Kongress 2024)
Event organizer :
Deutsche Gesellschaft für Neurologie
Event date :
06-09-2024
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed
Focus Area :
Systems Biomedicine
Development Goals :
3. Good health and well-being
FnR Project :
R-AGR-3931 - INTER/ERAPerMed 20/14599012/DIGIPD - GLAAB Enrico
Name of the research project :
R-AGR-3931 - INTER/ERAPerMed 20/14599012/DIGIPD - GLAAB Enrico
Funders :
FNR - Fonds National de la Recherche
Funding number :
R-AGR-3931 - INTER/ERAPerMed 20/14599012/DIGIPD
Available on ORBilu :
since 13 November 2024

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