Back to Search Start Over

Association of genetic risk for Alzheimer disease and hearing impairment.

Authors :
Brenowitz WD
Filshtein TJ
Yaffe K
Walter S
Ackley SF
Hoffmann TJ
Jorgenson E
Whitmer RA
Glymour MM
Source :
Neurology [Neurology] 2020 Oct 20; Vol. 95 (16), pp. e2225-e2234. Date of Electronic Publication: 2020 Sep 02.
Publication Year :
2020

Abstract

Objective: To test the hypothesis that incipient Alzheimer disease (AD) may adversely affect hearing and that hearing loss may adversely affect cognition, we evaluated whether genetic variants that increase AD risk also increase problem hearing and genetic variants that increase hearing impairment risk do not influence cognition.<br />Methods: UK Biobank participants without dementia ≥56 years of age with Caucasian genetic ancestry completed a Digit Triplets Test of speech-in-noise hearing (n = 80,074), self-reported problem hearing and hearing with background noise (n = 244,915), and completed brief cognitive assessments. A genetic risk score for AD (AD-GRS) was calculated as a weighted sum of 23 previously identified AD-related polymorphisms. A genetic risk score for hearing (hearing-GRS) was calculated using 3 previously identified polymorphisms related to hearing impairment. Using age-, sex-, and genetic ancestry-adjusted logistic and linear regression models, we evaluated whether the AD-GRS predicted poor hearing and whether the hearing-GRS predicted worse cognition.<br />Results: Poor speech-in-noise hearing (>-5.5-dB speech reception threshold; prevalence 14%) was associated with lower cognitive scores (ß = -1.28; 95% confidence interval [CI] -1.54 to -1.03). Higher AD-GRS was significantly associated with poor speech-in-noise hearing (odds ratio [OR] 1.06; 95% CI 1.01-1.11) and self-reported problems hearing with background noise (OR 1.03; 95% CI 1.00-1.05). Hearing-GRS was not significantly associated with cognitive scores (ß = -0.05; 95% CI -0.17 to 0.07).<br />Conclusions: Genetic risk for AD also influences speech-in-noise hearing. We failed to find evidence that genetic risk for hearing impairment affects cognition. AD disease processes or a that shared etiology may cause speech-in-noise difficulty before dementia onset.<br /> (© 2020 American Academy of Neurology.)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1526-632X
Volume :
95
Issue :
16
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Neurology
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
32878991
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000010709