Association of carotid and intracranial stenosis with Alzheimer’s disease biomarkers

To clarify whether atherosclerosis of the carotid and intracranial arteries is related to Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pathology in vivo, we investigated the associations of carotid and intracranial artery stenosis with cerebral beta-amyloid (Aβ) deposition and neurodegeneration in middle- and old-aged individuals. Given different variations of the pathologies between cognitive groups, we focused separately on cognitively normal (CN) and cognitively impaired (CI) groups. A total of 281 CN and 199 CI (mild cognitive impairment and AD dementia) subjects underwent comprehensive clinical assessment, [11C] Pittsburgh compound B-positron emission tomography, and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging including MR angiography. We evaluated extracranial carotid and intracranial arteries for the overall presence, severity (i.e., number and degree of narrowing), and location of stenosis. We found no associations between carotid and intracranial artery stenosis and cerebral Aβ burden in either the CN or the CI group. In terms of neurodegeneration, exploratory univariable analyses showed associations between the presence and severity of stenosis and regional neurodegeneration biomarkers (i.e., reduced hippocampal volume [HV] and cortical thickness in the AD-signature regions) in both the CN and CI groups. In confirmatory multivariable analyses controlling for demographic covariates and diagnosis, the association between number of stenotic intracranial arteries ≥ 2 and reduced HV in the CI group remained significant. Neither carotid nor intracranial artery stenosis appears to be associated with brain Aβ burden, while intracranial artery stenosis is related to amyloid-independent neurodegeneration, particularly hippocampal atrophy.

AD [5][6][7][8], others did not find such relationship [4,[9][10][11]. Regarding in vivo brain imaging approaches, a couple of small-scale studies on individuals with severe cerebral hypoperfusion yielded inconsistent findings on the relationship between very severe atherosclerosis and beta-amyloid (Aβ) deposition [12,13]. A recent study using high-resolution vessel wall magnetic resonance (MR) imaging reported that intracranial atherosclerotic plaque or stenosis was not associated with Aβ deposition in nondemented adults [14]. Nevertheless, knowledge of the association between carotid and intracranial atherosclerosis and other in vivo brain pathologies including regional neurodegeneration, as well as Aβ deposition, in the living human brain remains limited.
The relationships between carotid and intracranial artery atherosclerosis and in vivo brain pathologies may be different according to the cognitive status of individuals because of the following reasons: regional neurodegeneration is minimal in cognitively normal (CN) individuals, resulting in floor effect, while it has wide variation in those with cognitive impairment (CI), correlating with the degree of cognitive decline [15]. In addition, many AD dementia patients show almost saturated Aβ deposition, possibly resulting in ceiling effect [15]. Given these reasons, a cognitive state-specific approach, separately focusing on CN and CI individuals, could be helpful.
We aimed to investigate the associations between carotid and intracranial artery stenosis systematically measured on MR angiography and AD biomarkers including cerebral Aβ deposition and regional neurodegeneration in a large number of older adults including both the CN and CI groups.

Participants
This study is part of the Korean Brain Aging Study for Early Diagnosis and Prediction of Alzheimer's Disease (KBASE), an ongoing prospective, community-based cohort study [16]. As of February 2017, a total of 480 older adults consisting of 281 CN and 199 CI (MCI and AD dementia) subjects were initially recruited. The inclusion criteria for the CN group were (a) aged 55-90 years, (b) no diagnosis of MCI or dementia, and (c) Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) score of 0. For the MCI group, individuals 55-90 years old who fulfilled the core clinical criteria for diagnosis of MCI according to the recommendations of the National Institute on Aging-Alzheimer's Association (NIA-AA) guidelines [17] were included as follows: (a) memory complaints corroborated by the patient, an informant, or clinician; (b) objective memory impairment for age, education, and gender (i.e., at least 1.0 SD below the respective age, education, and gender-specific mean for at least one of the four episodic memory tests included in the Korean version of Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer's Disease (CERAD-K) neuropsychological battery [Word List Memory, Word List Recall, Word List Recognition, and Constructional Recall test]); (c) largely intact functional activities; and (d) no dementia. The global CDR score of all MCI individuals was 0.5. For the AD dementia group, participants 55-90 years old who fulfilled the following inclusion criteria were recruited: (a) criteria for dementia in accordance with the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 4th Edition (DSM-IV-TR), (b) the criteria for probable AD dementia in accordance with the NIA-AA guidelines [18], and (c) a global CDR score of 0·5 or 1. For all groups, individuals with the following conditions were excluded from the study: (1) presence of major psychiatric illness; (2) significant neurological or medical condition or comorbidities that could affect mental function; (3) contraindications to MRI (e.g., pacemaker, claustrophobia); (4) illiteracy; (5) presence of significant visual/hearing difficulty, and severe communication or behavioral problems that would make clinical examination or brain scan difficult; (6) taking an investigational drug; and (7) pregnant or breastfeeding. More detailed information on recruitment of the KBASE cohort was described in our previous report [16]. This study protocol was approved by the Institutional Review Boards of Seoul National University Hospital and SNU-SMG Boramae Medical Center, Seoul, South Korea. The participants and/or their legal representatives provided written informed consent.

Clinical assessment
All participants were administered comprehensive clinical and neuropsychological assessments by trained psychiatrists and neuropsychologists based on the KBASE assessment protocol which incorporates the CERAD-K [16]. Blood samples were collected to determine apolipoprotein E ε4 allele (APOE4) carrier status. Vascular risk factors, including hypertension, diabetes mellitus, hyperlipidemia, coronary artery disease, transient ischemic attack, and stroke, were evaluated via systematic interview by trained nurses, and vascular risk score was calculated for the number of vascular risk factors present and reported as a percentage [16].

Systematic evaluation of stenosis on MR angiography
Diagnosis of extracranial carotid and intracranial arterial stenosis was reached by the consensus between two qualified neuroradiologists (KMK and CHS) blinded to the participants' clinical information. We recorded the overall presence, the number, and the degree of detectable stenotic lesions in the following 13 arterial segments: right and left proximal cervical internal carotid artery (ICA); right and left intracranial ICA; right and left anterior, middle, and posterior cerebral arteries; right and left intracranial vertebral artery; and basilar artery. For the extracranial carotid artery, the degree of stenosis was measured according to the North American Symptomatic Carotid Endarterectomy Trial (NASCET) criteria [19] using maximum-intensity projections and source images of the bifurcation of the carotid artery. In cases of intracranial arterial stenosis, the degree of stenosis was calculated based on maximum-intensity projections and source images using the method published for the Warfarin-Aspirin Symptomatic Intracranial Disease Study [20]: percent stenosis = [(1 − (D stenosis /D normal )] × 100. In the case of an artery with multiple stenotic lesions, the most severe degree was selected. Based on the above quantitative data, participants were categorized into stenosis-positive (stenosis+) vs. stenosis-negative (stenosis−) groups according to the stenosis measurements for extracranial carotid and intracranial arteries as follows: (i) overall presence of any detectable stenosis and (ii) severity (i.e., the degree of stenosis ≥ 50%, and number of stenotic arteries ≥ 2). In terms of the location of intracranial arterial stenosis, the presence of detectable stenosis in the anterior circulation and posterior circulations was also evaluated. Anterior circulation stenosis was defined as any detectable stenosis in ICA and anterior or middle cerebral arteries. Posterior circulation stenosis included any detectable stenosis in intracranial vertebral or basilar arteries. As there were only very limited numbers of cases with ≥ 50% stenotic lesions in the extracranial carotid arteries (1 of 281 subjects in the CN group and 1 of 196 subjects in the CI group), and those with bilateral extracranial carotid stenosis (6 of 281 subjects in the CN group and 6 of 196 subjects in the CI group) in our sample, these measurements could not be applied to the extracranial carotid arteries and only available for evaluation of intracranial arterial stenosis.

Beta-amyloid (Aβ) biomarker
For measurement of Aβ biomarker of AD, a 30-min emission scan was obtained 40 min after injection of intravenous administration of 555 MBq of [ 11 C] PiB (range, 450-610 MBq). The [ 11 C] PiB-PET data collected in list mode were processed for routine corrections such as uniformity, UTE-based attenuation, and decay corrections, and were reconstructed into a 344 × 344 image matrix using iterative methods (5 iterations with 21 subsets). The image preprocessing steps were performed using Statistical Parametric Mapping 8 (SPM8; http://www.fil.ion.ucl.ac.uk/spm) implemented in MATL AB 2014a (MathWorks, Natick, MA, USA). Static [ 11 C] PiB-PET images were coregistered to individual T1 structural images, and transformation parameters for spatial normalization of individual T1 images to a standard Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) template were calculated. The inverse transformation of parameters to transform coordinates from the automatic anatomic labeling (AAL) 116 atlas [21] into an individual space for each subject (resampling voxel size = 1 × 0.98 × 0.98 mm) was performed using IBASPM (Individual Brain Atlases using Statistical Parametric Mapping) software in MATLAB. To extract gray matter (GM) and exclude the non-GM portions of the atlas (i.e., white matter [WM] and cerebrospinal fluid space), a GM mask, which is a binary probabilistic GM map generated by preprocessing step using SPM8, was applied for each individual. The mean regional [ 11 C] PiB uptake values from cerebral regions were extracted using the individual AAL 116 atlas from T1-coregistered [ 11 C] PiB-PET images. Cerebellar GM was used as the reference region for quantitative normalization of cerebral [ 11 C] PiB uptake values, due to its relatively low Aβ deposition [22], with a probabilistic cerebellar atlas (Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience, UCL; Cognitive Neuroscience Laboratory, Royal Holloway, University of London, UK) which was transformed into individual space as described above. The AAL algorithm and a region combining method [23] were applied to determine regions of interest (ROIs) to characterize the [ 11 C] PiB retention levels in the frontal, lateral parietal, posterior cingulateprecuneus, and lateral temporal regions. A global Aβ retention value (standardized uptake value ratio, SUVR) was generated by dividing the voxel-weighted mean value of the four ROIs by the mean cerebellar uptake value [23][24][25]. Aβ positivity was defined if [ 11 C] PiB SUVR value was > 1.4 in at least one of the abovementioned four ROIs [23][24][25].

Neurodegeneration biomarker
All T1-weighted MR images were automatically segmented using FreeSurfer version 5.3 (http://surfer.nmr. mgh.harvard.edu/) with manual correction of minor segmentation errors. As AD-related neurodegeneration biomarkers, both AD-signature cortical thickness (AD-CT; i.e., mean cortical thickness obtained from AD-signature regions) and hippocampal volume adjusted for intracranial volume (HVa) were measured as described previously [24]. First, AD-CT was defined as the mean cortical thickness values of AD-signature regions including the entorhinal, inferior temporal, middle temporal, and fusiform gyrus, based on the Desikan-Killiany atlas [26]. Second, to obtain HVa, left and right hippocampi volume from the FreeSurfer extracted output were first added together to yield the total hippocampal volume (HV). Then, the volume deviating from the expected total HV according to intracranial volume (ICV) based on the reference group (i.e., young CN group of the study cohort [KBASE]), which was not included in the present study, was calculated to obtain HVa as described in the previous study [24,27]. Briefly, a linear regression line was derived based on the young control group (i.e., the reference group) using their ICV and total HV. HVa, then, is the residual from the linear regression of HV (y-axis) vs. ICV (x-axis); therefore, the HVa is interpreted as the amount of deviation in a subject's hippocampal volume from what is expected given their ICV.

White matter hyperintensities
The volume of white matter hyperintensities (WMH) on FLAIR images was calculated using a validated automatic procedure [28] with two modifications, as follows: First, an optimal threshold of 70 instead of 65 in the original reference was applied, as the original study [28] recommended adjustment of the threshold for each study dataset to capture the voxels with WMH better than 65 without including non-WMH voxels. More detailed information on the adjustment of the threshold is described in Methods S2 (Additional file 1). Second, diffusion-weighted imaging was not used in the present automated procedure as there were no participants with acute cerebral infarcts in our study population. WMH candidate images were used to extract WMH volumes based on lobar ROIs in the native space for each subject [29].

Statistical analysis
Clinical characteristics were compared between CN and CI, and between MCI and AD dementia using the chisquare and Fisher exact tests to compare data distributions, and independent t test to compare means of continuous variables. Interobserver agreement for stenosis was determined by calculating Cohen's kappa correlation coefficient from 125 randomly selected individuals.
The association between a measure of extracranial carotid or intracranial stenosis and AD biomarkers (i.e., global Aβ deposition, AD-CT, and HVa) was investigated focusing on CN and CI separately, with two steps of analysis including exploratory and confirmative steps. Exploratory univariable analyses were performed with independent t test to compare the quantitative values of AD biomarkers between the stenosis+ and stenosis− groups. Cohen's d was determined to imply the effect size of the discrepancy between sequences. The AD biomarkers with p < 0.05 in exploratory univariable analyses were selected for the next confirmatory multivariable analyses. Confirmative multivariable analyses using general linear model (GLM) were conducted for the selected biomarker adjusting for age, sex, and APOE4 carrier status for the CN group, and for age, sex APOE4 carrier status, and clinical diagnosis (MCI or AD dementia) for the CI group. The Bonferroni correction method was applied to multiple comparisons using p < 0.05/no. of confirmatory analyses within each cognitive group. The same analyses with WMH volume as an additional covariate were also conducted to evaluate the mediating effect of WM lesions.
All statistical analyses except calculating Cohen's d were performed using IBM SPSS Statistics 23 (SPSS Inc., Chicago, IL, USA), and p < 0.05 (two-sided) was taken to indicate statistical significance unless otherwise specified. Cohen's d was calculated using effsize package in the R 4.0.0.

Characteristics of the participants
The demographic and clinical characteristics of the participants are presented in Table 1. Data on the presence of vessel stenosis and AD biomarkers of the participants are also shown in Table 2. Three cases were excluded from the evaluation of extracranial carotid stenosis due to motion artifacts. The characteristics of MCI and AD dementia subgroups in the CI group are also presented in Table S1 and S2 in Additional file 2. The CI group  "Stenosis−" group of "≥ 50% intracranial stenosis" means individuals with no stenosis or < 50% intracranial stenosis c "Stenosis−" group of "number of stenotic intracranial arteries ≥ 2" means patients with no stenosis or only one stenotic intracranial artery *p < 0.05 consisted of 129 subjects with MCI and 70 subjects with AD dementia.

Reproducibility of a measure of extracranial carotid or intracranial stenosis
The results of the interobserver agreement for a measure of extracranial carotid or intracranial stenosis are shown as Table S3 in Additional file 2. The kappa values were 0.715 for extracranial carotid stenosis, 0.869 for any intracranial stenosis, 0.715 for number of stenotic intracranial arteries ≥ 2, 0.802 for anterior circulation stenosis, and 1 for posterior circulation stenosis. The kappa value for ≥ 50% stenosis was 0.301 due to the very low prevalence of ≥ 50% stenosis despite the high degree of interobserver agreement.

Association of carotid and intracranial stenosis with AD biomarkers in the CN group
In the exploratory step of the analyses, we found no significant differences in global Aβ deposition between CN subjects with vs. those without any type of stenosis (Table 3). In contrast, with regard to neurodegeneration biomarkers, AD-CT was significantly reduced in CN subjects in the stenosis+ group compared with CN subjects in the stenosis− group for the presence of any extracranial carotid stenosis, presence of any intracranial stenosis, number of stenotic intracranial arteries ≥ 2, anterior circulation stenosis, and posterior circulation stenosis (all p < 0.05; Table 3). In addition, HVa was significantly reduced in the stenosis+ CN group compared to the stenosis− CN group for the presence of any intracranial arterial stenosis. Next, for confirmatory analyses in the CN group, we further investigated the associations between AD-CT and each of the abovementioned five measurements of stenosis that showed association in exploratory univariable analyses (p < 0.05), as well as the association between HVa and presence of any intracranial stenosis, after controlling for the effects of age, sex, and APOE4 carrier status (Table 4). When Bonferroni-corrected p value (p < 0.05/ 6 = 0.008) was applied, these associations were not significant in the confirmatory analyses, although posterior circulation stenosis showed a trend for association with reduced AD-CT (p = 0.030).

Association of carotid and intracranial stenosis with AD biomarkers in the CI group
In the CI group, exploratory univariable analyses found an association between anterior circulation stenosis and lower global Aβ deposition (p = 0.049, Table 5). However, it was not significant in the confirmatory step when controlling for age, gender, APOE4 carrier status, and clinical diagnosis (MCI vs. AD dementia) (B = − 0.096, SE = 0.072, and p = 0.183). In terms of exploratory univariable analyses of neurodegeneration biomarkers, there were no differences in AD-CT between the stenosis+ and stenosis− groups for any type of stenosis in CI subjects (Table 5). However, the presence of any intracranial arterial stenosis and number of stenotic intracranial arteries ≥ 2 were associated with reduced HVa in CI subjects (p = 0.047 and p = 0.008, respectively; Table 5). These two associations were selected for subsequent confirmatory multivariable analyses after controlling for age, gender, APOE4 carrier status, and clinical diagnosis ( Table 6). Bonferroni-corrected p < 0.05/2 = 0.025 was used as a statistical threshold. In the confirmatory multivariable analyses, CI subjects with number of stenotic intracranial arteries ≥ 2 had significantly lower HVa than those without when controlling for age, gender, APOE4 carrier status, and clinical diagnosis (p = 0.021; Figs. 1 and 2). The results did not change even after additional adjustment for WMH volume (B = − 509.45, SE = 205.55, and p = 0.014). In order to investigate whether the presence of Aβ deposition (i.e., Aβ positivity) moderates the association between the stenosis and lower HVa, we additionally tested similar GLM model including the Covariates for confirmatory multivariable analyses include age, sex, and APOE4 carrier status. Units for AD biomarker variables are as follows: SUVR for global Aβ, mm for AD-CT, and mm 3 for HVa. When Bonferroni-corrected p value (p < 0.05/6 = 0.008) was applied for confirmatory multivariable analyses regarding neurodegeneration biomarkers, these associations were not significant, although posterior circulation stenosis showed a trend for association with reduced AD-CT AD Alzheimer's disease, CN cognitively normal, SE standard error, AD-CT Alzheimer's disease-signature cortical thickness, HVa hippocampal volume adjusted for intracranial volume a No significant findings in the exploratory univariable analyses step regarding Aβ biomarker *p < 0.05 (before Bonferroni correction) stenosis (i.e., number of stenotic intracranial arteries ≥ 2) × Aβ positivity interaction term, as well as the stenosis itself, as an independent variable. In this analysis, we did not find any significant stenosis × Aβ positivity interaction effect. On the other hand, the association between presence of any intracranial stenosis and lower HVa in the CI group did not remain significant in confirmatory analysis (p = 0.597; Table 6).

Discussion
This study was performed to investigate the associations of both extracranial carotid and intracranial artery stenosis with in vivo AD pathologies, i.e., global Aβ burden and neurodegeneration in a large number of older adults, focusing on the CN and CI groups separately. Global Aβ burden was not related to any vessel stenosis in either group. With regard to neurodegeneration, the CN group did not show any significant associations between carotid and intracranial artery stenosis and AD-CT or HVa. In contrast, in the CI group, number of stenotic intracranial arteries ≥ 2 was significantly associated with lower HVa even after adjusting for age, gender, APOE4 carrier status, and diagnosis (i.e., MCI vs. AD dementia). A number of previous postmortem brain studies investigated the association between cerebral atherosclerosis and Aβ burden, but the results were controversial [1][2][3][4][5][6][7][8]. While a number of previous autopsy studies reported a Data for continuous variables presented as means ± SD (SUVR for global Aβ, mm for AD-CT, and mm 3 for HVa) CI cognitively impaired, SUVR standardized uptake value ratio, AD-CT Alzheimer's disease-signature cortical thickness, HVa hippocampal volume adjusted for intracranial volume a d indicates Cohen's delta b "Stenosis−" group of "≥50% intracranial stenosis" means individuals with no stenosis or < 50% intracranial stenosis c "Stenosis−" group of "number of stenotic intracranial arteries ≥ 2" means patients with no stenosis or only one stenotic intracranial artery *p < 0.05 significant association between intracranial atherosclerosis and neuritic plaques in AD [1][2][3][4], several others found no such associations [5][6][7][8]. Recently, a community-based study in adults without dementia reported that intracranial atherosclerotic plaque or stenosis was not associated with Aβ deposition in the brain [14]. Our results in the CN and CI groups are in agreement with the study [14] regarding the relationship between carotid and intracranial stenosis and global Aβ burden. As both cerebral atherosclerosis and Aβ deposition are common in the elderly, the possibility of coincidence cannot be excluded in postmortem studies with positive association between the two. In contrast to global Aβ burden, intracranial artery stenosis was associated with neurodegeneration biomarkers in the CI group. In particular, number of stenotic intracranial arteries ≥ 2 was significantly associated with lower hippocampal volume in CI subjects in confirmatory multivariable analysis. Some previous studies identified intracranial atherosclerosis as an independent risk factor for cerebral atrophy [5,30]. In these studies, however, intracranial atherosclerosis was assessed based only on cavernous ICA calcification on computed tomography [30] or pathological examination of the circle of Willis [31]. In contrast, we evaluated stenosis of all cerebral arteries. With this approach and strict control for multiple testing errors, we confirmed the association between intracranial artery stenosis and HVa in the CI group. The association remained significant even after controlling for WMH volume, suggesting that intracranial artery stenosis affects hippocampal atrophy independently of changes in the WM. Hippocampal atrophy is a validated neurodegeneration biomarker of AD and is closely correlated with early cognitive decline in AD [32]. Therefore, the association of intracranial stenosis with decreased HVa, together with no association with Aβ burden, in the CI group indicates that intracranial stenosis contributes to the development of CI via Aβ-independent neurodegeneration of the hippocampus.
In the CN group, while exploratory univariable analyses showed relations between various types of stenosis and AD-CT or HVa in CN, such relations were not confirmed by multivariable analyses with a strict statistical threshold. Nevertheless, AD-CT tended to be lower in subjects with posterior circulation stenosis than those without (p = 0.03), although the difference was not statistically significant after Bonferroni correction. In a previous postmortem study which reported the association between intracranial artery atherosclerosis and AD dementia, the posterior cerebral artery (PCA), one of the posterior circulation, showed the most severe atherosclerosis among the circle of Willis arteries in AD dementia patients [7]. Therefore, the potential association between posterior circulation stenosis and AD-CT deserves attention. Actually, the AD-signature regions, where we measured cortical thickness, include the entorhinal, inferior temporal, and fusiform gyri that receive blood supply from the PCA. Fig. 1 Comparison of HVa between the stenosis− and stenosis+ groups for number of stenotic intracranial arteries ≥ 2 in CI subjects. In the boxand-whisker plot, the central box represents the values from the lower to upper quartile, the middle line represents the median, and the horizontal line extends from the minimum to the maximum value. *Adjusted p < 0.05 (after controlling for the effects of age, gender, APOE4, and clinical diagnosis (MCI vs. AD dementia)). HVa, hippocampal volume adjusted for intracranial volume; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; AD, Alzheimer's disease We found no significant associations between extracranial carotid stenosis and AD biomarkers regardless of the presence of cognitive impairment. Some previous in vivo studies with very small sample sizes investigated the associations between severe carotid stenosis or occlusion and Aβ deposition and yielded contradictory findings. While one study using [ 18 F] AV-45 PET indicated that Aβ deposition increased in dementia patients with unilateral carotid artery stenosis, and its distribution was lateralized to the side of stenosis [12], a more recent study using [ 18 F] flutemetamol PET indicated that cerebral hypoperfusion caused by unilateral occlusion of the ICA did not induce brain accumulation of Aβ [13]. In terms of neurodegeneration, our results were inconsistent with several previous studies that showed increased carotid intima-media thickness and carotid stenosis were associated with decreased total brain volume [8,33]. This discrepancy may have been due to the severity of stenosis. Only a very small number of subjects with ≥ 50% stenosis in the extracranial carotid artery were included in the present study (1 of 281 subjects in the CN group and 1 of 196 subjects in the CI group), while many previous studies indicated associations of the degree of severity [3,33] or severe carotid atherosclerosis [34,35] with brain atrophy.
To our knowledge, this is the first study to investigate the association between MR angiography-measured vessel stenosis in the extracranial carotid and intracranial arteries and in vivo AD pathologies, including both Aβ deposition and neurodegeneration, in a large sample of older adults, focusing separately on the CN and CI groups. However, there were some limitations in our study. First, due to its cross-sectional design, we cannot make conclusions regarding the cause and effect relationship between carotid and intracranial artery stenosis and in vivo AD pathologies. Second, although we included a relatively large number of subjects, the frequencies of stenosis, particularly extracranial carotid stenosis, number of stenotic intracranial arteries ≥ 2, and posterior circulation stenosis, were relatively low in both the CN and CI groups, which may have reduced statistical power and made it difficult to identify significant Fig. 2 Representative MR angiographic images of intracranial and neck vessels, and coronal sections of T1-weighted images showing medial temporal structures including the bilateral hippocampi of CI individuals in the a stenosis− group and b stenosis+ group with regard to number of stenotic intracranial arteries ≥ 2. a Stenosis−: MR angiography of a 77-year-old woman with MCI with no steno-occlusive lesions in both intracranial and neck vessels. HVa was − 1052 mm 3 , and no significant hippocampal atrophy was observed in coronal sections on T1-weighted MRI. b Stenosis+: MR angiography of an 81-year-old woman with MCI with multifocal intracranial arterial stenosis, while no steno-occlusive lesions were found in the extracranial carotid arteries. HVa was − 3862 mm 3 , and coronal sections on T1-weighted MRI indicate bilateral hippocampal atrophy. MR, magnetic resonance; HVa, hippocampal volume adjusted for intracranial volume; MCI, mild cognitive impairment associations after multiple comparison correction. Carotid and intracranial artery stenosis has not been a common finding in community-dwelling subjects [36,37], with reported prevalence rates of asymptomatic intracranial stenosis ranging from 5.9 to 24.5% [37]. In addition, the prevalence of cervical carotid artery stenosis varies significantly with ethnicity, and it was reported to be particularly uncommon in a Korean population-based screening cohort [36]. Therefore, our study population seemed to reflect the prevalence of asymptomatic carotid and intracranial stenosis in the general Asian population. Finally, given that about 55% of MCI individuals and 23% of clinically defined AD dementia patients among the subjects were Aβ negative, brain pathological conditions other than AD and vascular lesions, such as primary age-related taupathy, hippocampal sclerosis, and argyrophilic grain disease, might contribute to neurodegenerative changes. Future studies including the examination of the conditions are needed.

Conclusions
In conclusion, our findings suggested that neither carotid nor intracranial artery stenosis is associated with brain Aβ burden, while intracranial artery stenosis is related to amyloid-independent neurodegeneration, particularly hippocampal atrophy.