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Advanced structural brain aging in preclinical autosomal dominant Alzheimer disease.

Authors :
Millar PR
Gordon BA
Wisch JK
Schultz SA
Benzinger TL
Cruchaga C
Hassenstab JJ
Ibanez L
Karch C
Llibre-Guerra JJ
Morris JC
Perrin RJ
Supnet-Bell C
Xiong C
Allegri RF
Berman SB
Chhatwal JP
Chrem Mendez PA
Day GS
Hofmann A
Ikeuchi T
Jucker M
Lee JH
Levin J
Lopera F
Niimi Y
Sánchez-González VJ
Schofield PR
Sosa-Ortiz AL
Vöglein J
Bateman RJ
Ances BM
McDade EM
Source :
Molecular neurodegeneration [Mol Neurodegener] 2023 Dec 19; Vol. 18 (1), pp. 98. Date of Electronic Publication: 2023 Dec 19.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: "Brain-predicted age" estimates biological age from complex, nonlinear features in neuroimaging scans. The brain age gap (BAG) between predicted and chronological age is elevated in sporadic Alzheimer disease (AD), but is underexplored in autosomal dominant AD (ADAD), in which AD progression is highly predictable with minimal confounding age-related co-pathology.<br />Methods: We modeled BAG in 257 deeply-phenotyped ADAD mutation-carriers and 179 non-carriers from the Dominantly Inherited Alzheimer Network using minimally-processed structural MRI scans. We then tested whether BAG differed as a function of mutation and cognitive status, or estimated years until symptom onset, and whether it was associated with established markers of amyloid (PiB PET, CSF amyloid-β-42/40), phosphorylated tau (CSF and plasma pTau-181), neurodegeneration (CSF and plasma neurofilament-light-chain [NfL]), and cognition (global neuropsychological composite and CDR-sum of boxes). We compared BAG to other MRI measures, and examined heterogeneity in BAG as a function of ADAD mutation variants, APOE ε4 carrier status, sex, and education.<br />Results: Advanced brain aging was observed in mutation-carriers approximately 7 years before expected symptom onset, in line with other established structural indicators of atrophy. BAG was moderately associated with amyloid PET and strongly associated with pTau-181, NfL, and cognition in mutation-carriers. Mutation variants, sex, and years of education contributed to variability in BAG.<br />Conclusions: We extend prior work using BAG from sporadic AD to ADAD, noting consistent results. BAG associates well with markers of pTau, neurodegeneration, and cognition, but to a lesser extent, amyloid, in ADAD. BAG may capture similar signal to established MRI measures. However, BAG offers unique benefits in simplicity of data processing and interpretation. Thus, results in this unique ADAD cohort with few age-related confounds suggest that brain aging attributable to AD neuropathology can be accurately quantified from minimally-processed MRI.<br /> (© 2023. The Author(s).)

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
1750-1326
Volume :
18
Issue :
1
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
Molecular neurodegeneration
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
38111006
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13024-023-00688-3