Bayesian modelling applied to Tau PET to explore the effects of heterogeneity in tau patterns
Ye Xia, Keith A. Johnson, Georges El Fakhri El Fakhri, Nicolas J Guehl, Elsmarieke van de Giessen, Wiesje M. van der Flier, Yolande A.L. Pijnenburg, Rik Ossenkoppele, Colin Groot

TL;DR
This paper uses Bayesian modeling to identify distinct tau patterns in Alzheimer's patients and finds that these patterns are linked to different cognitive outcomes.
Contribution
The novel contribution is the application of a data-driven Bayesian framework to identify and validate overlapping tau patterns in Alzheimer's disease.
Findings
Higher medial temporal lobe tau loading is associated with better baseline cognitive performance.
Posterior tau loading correlates with worse executive and visuospatial functioning.
Left temporal tau loading is linked to worse memory, executive, and language functioning.
Abstract
Traditionally, mutually exclusive subgroups have been used to explore the effects of tau heterogeneity on cognitive outcomes, which ignores much of the complexity and overlap found in tau patterns across individuals. We used a data‐driven Bayesian modeling framework based on Latent Dirichlet Allocation to identify 4 tau patterns (i.e., factors) in a discovery cohort of amyloid‐positive individuals with symptomatic AD from the Amsterdam Dementia Cohort (N = 93, age=65.26, Females=43, education=10y Dementia=81, MCI=12). For an independent replication sample from ADNI (N = 191, age=73.4, Females=86, education = 15.87, Dementia=74, MCI=117), we then extracted factor loadings across each of the factors, which indicate to what extent an individual's tau pattern is represented by each of the factors. Inter‐individual distributions of factor loadings are interdependent and add up to 100. In…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Mental Health Research Topics · Psychometric Methodologies and Testing
