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Early-onset Alzheimers disease explained by polygenic risk of late-onset disease?

Authors :
Mantyh, William
Mantyh, William
Cochran, J
Taylor, Jared
Broce, Iris
Geier, Ethan
Bonham, Luke
Anderson, Ashlyn
Joie, Renaud
Iaccarino, Leonardo
Chaudhary, Kiran
Edwards, Lauren
Strom, Amelia
Grant, Harli
Allen, Isabel
Miller, Zachary
Gorno-Tempini, Marilu
Kramer, Joel
Miller, Bruce
Desikan, Rahul
Rabinovici, Gil
Yokoyama, Jennifer
Sirkis, Daniel
Mantyh, William
Mantyh, William
Cochran, J
Taylor, Jared
Broce, Iris
Geier, Ethan
Bonham, Luke
Anderson, Ashlyn
Joie, Renaud
Iaccarino, Leonardo
Chaudhary, Kiran
Edwards, Lauren
Strom, Amelia
Grant, Harli
Allen, Isabel
Miller, Zachary
Gorno-Tempini, Marilu
Kramer, Joel
Miller, Bruce
Desikan, Rahul
Rabinovici, Gil
Yokoyama, Jennifer
Sirkis, Daniel
Source :
Alzheimers and Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment and Disease Monitoring; vol 15, iss 4; 2352-8729
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Early-onset Alzheimers disease (AD) is highly heritable, yet only 10% of cases are associated with known pathogenic mutations. For early-onset AD patients without an identified autosomal dominant cause, we hypothesized that their early-onset disease reflects further enrichment of the common risk-conferring single nucleotide polymorphisms associated with late-onset AD. We applied a previously validated polygenic hazard score for late-onset AD to 193 consecutive patients diagnosed at our tertiary dementia referral center with symptomatic early-onset AD. For comparison, we included 179 participants with late-onset AD and 70 healthy controls. Polygenic hazard scores were similar in early- versus late-onset AD. The polygenic hazard score was not associated with age-of-onset or disease biomarkers within early-onset AD. Early-onset AD does not represent an extreme enrichment of the common single nucleotide polymorphisms associated with late-onset AD. Further exploration of novel genetic risk factors of this highly heritable disease is warranted.Highlights: There is a unique genetic architecture of early- versus late-onset Alzheimers disease (AD).Late-onset AD polygenic risk is not an explanation for early-onset AD.Polygenic risk of late-onset AD does not predict early-onset AD biology.Unique genetic architecture of early- versus late-onset AD parallels AD heterogeneity.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Alzheimers and Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment and Disease Monitoring; vol 15, iss 4; 2352-8729
Notes :
application/pdf, Alzheimers and Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment and Disease Monitoring vol 15, iss 4 2352-8729
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1410330085
Document Type :
Electronic Resource