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Alzheimer's disease genetic risk and cognitive reserve in relationship to long-term cognitive trajectories among cognitively normal individuals.

Authors :
Pettigrew C
Nazarovs J
Soldan A
Singh V
Wang J
Hohman T
Dumitrescu L
Libby J
Kunkle B
Gross AL
Johnson S
Lu Q
Engelman C
Masters CL
Maruff P
Laws SM
Morris JC
Hassenstab J
Cruchaga C
Resnick SM
Kitner-Triolo MH
An Y
Albert M
Source :
Alzheimer's research & therapy [Alzheimers Res Ther] 2023 Mar 28; Vol. 15 (1), pp. 66. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Mar 28.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: Both Alzheimer's disease (AD) genetic risk factors and indices of cognitive reserve (CR) influence risk of cognitive decline, but it remains unclear whether they interact. This study examined whether a CR index score modifies the relationship between AD genetic risk factors and long-term cognitive trajectories in a large sample of individuals with normal cognition.<br />Methods: Analyses used data from the Preclinical AD Consortium, including harmonized data from 5 longitudinal cohort studies. Participants were cognitively normal at baseline (M baseline age = 64 years, 59% female) and underwent 10 years of follow-up, on average. AD genetic risk was measured by (i) apolipoprotein-E (APOE) genetic status (APOE-ε2 and APOE-ε4 vs. APOE-ε3; N = 1819) and (ii) AD polygenic risk scores (AD-PRS; N = 1175). A CR index was calculated by combining years of education and literacy scores. Longitudinal cognitive performance was measured by harmonized factor scores for global cognition, episodic memory, and executive function.<br />Results: In mixed-effects models, higher CR index scores were associated with better baseline cognitive performance for all cognitive outcomes. APOE-ε4 genotype and AD-PRS that included the APOE region (AD-PRS <subscript>APOE</subscript> ) were associated with declines in all cognitive domains, whereas AD-PRS that excluded the APOE region (AD-PRS <subscript>w/oAPOE</subscript> ) was associated with declines in executive function and global cognition, but not memory. There were significant 3-way CR index score × APOE-ε4 × time interactions for the global (p = 0.04, effect size = 0.16) and memory scores (p = 0.01, effect size = 0.22), indicating the negative effect of APOE-ε4 genotype on global and episodic memory score change was attenuated among individuals with higher CR index scores. In contrast, levels of CR did not attenuate APOE-ε4-related declines in executive function or declines associated with higher AD-PRS. APOE-ε2 genotype was unrelated to cognition.<br />Conclusions: These results suggest that APOE-ε4 and non-APOE-ε4 AD polygenic risk are independently associated with global cognitive and executive function declines among individuals with normal cognition at baseline, but only APOE-ε4 is associated with declines in episodic memory. Importantly, higher levels of CR may mitigate APOE-ε4-related declines in some cognitive domains. Future research is needed to address study limitations, including generalizability due to cohort demographic characteristics.<br /> (© 2023. The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1758-9193
Volume :
15
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Alzheimer's research & therapy
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
36978190
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13195-023-01206-9