Research News
Alzheimer's or Lewy Body Dementia? How Patients Draw Can Determine the Type of Dementia
Researchers from the University of Tsukuba and IBM Research find that automatic analysis of patients' drawings can help differentiate between Alzheimer's disease and dementia with Lewy bodies
Tsukuba, Japan—The two most common neurodegenerative dementias are Alzheimer's disease (AD) and dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB). There is often an overlap of symptoms across these two diseases, which can make diagnoses difficult. Although biomarkers in cerebrospinal fluid sampling and neuroimaging are the most well-validated diagnostic biomarkers, they can be invasive, time-consuming, and expensive. Researchers in Japan have discovered that the characteristics of patients' drawing process can discriminate between patients with AD and DLB, offering a cheap, non-invasive, and quick screening tool.
Recently, an analysis of drawing tests has been shown to be useful for the identification of AD as well as Parkinson's disease, another form of Lewy body spectrum disorders. However, no such investigation has taken place for the identification of DLB nor the differentiation between AD and DLB. Researchers from the University of Tsukuba and IBM Research set out to investigate what could be achieved for diagnostic decision-making by combining data obtained from these drawing tests with machine learning approaches.
Using an electronic tablet and pen, patients with AD and DLB and healthy controls completed digital versions of conventional drawing tests, such as drawing a clockface and coping pentagon patterns. They found that DLB patients showed differences from healthy controls in speed-, pressure-, and pause-related features, whereas AD patients showed differences in only pause-related features. These discriminative differences in features characterizing the drawing process reflected the cognitive and motor impairments in AD and DLB. These features were combined into a machine learning model to classify patients according to their drawing profiles. The model discriminated the three groups with high accuracy, and importantly, the AD patients from LBD patients.
"Interestingly, different drawing tasks played determinant roles in classifying different pairs of these three diagnostic groups.," explains senior author Professor Tetsuaki Arai. "This is the first study to highlight the usefulness of combining multiple drawing tasks for enabling both identification and differentiation of AD and DLB."
Previous studies have suggested that the visuospatial deficits of AD and DLB patients reflect specific neuropathological features of the disease. Therefore, the team's next step is to explore pathological biomarkers, which Professor Arai says "may reveal unique signatures of drawing impairments that are reflective of underlying pathologies in AD and DLB."
Importantly, the proposed approach can be readily incorporated into clinical practice. Commercial-grade digital devices are readily available to collect drawing data from patients, such that clinicians may employ this highly feasible, easy-to-use, and economical tool to improve diagnostic decision-making in dementia without significantly altering their current routines.
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This work was supported by the Japan Society for the Promotion of Science, KAKENHI (grant 19H01084). The funder did not play any active role in either the scientific investigation or the reporting of the study.
Original Paper
The article, "Characteristics of drawing process differentiate Alzheimer's disease and dementia with Lewy bodies," was published in Journal of Alzheimer's Disease at DOI: 10.3233/JAD-220546
Correspondence
Professor ARAI Tetsuaki
Faculty of Medicine, University of Tsukuba