| Literature DB >> 28323826 |
Jing Qian1, Frank J Wolters2, Alexa Beiser3,4, Mary Haan5, M Arfan Ikram2, Jason Karlawish6, Jessica B Langbaum7, John M Neuhaus5, Eric M Reiman7,8,9,10, J Scott Roberts11, Sudha Seshadri3, Pierre N Tariot7,8, Beth McCarty Woods6, Rebecca A Betensky12, Deborah Blacker13,14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: With the onset of prevention trials for individuals at high risk for Alzheimer disease, there is increasing need for accurate risk prediction to inform study design and enrollment, but available risk estimates are limited. We developed risk estimates for the incidence of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or dementia among cognitively unimpaired individuals by APOE-e4 dose for the genetic disclosure process of the Alzheimer's Prevention Initiative Generation Study, a prevention trial in cognitively unimpaired APOE-e4/e4 homozygote individuals. METHODS ANDEntities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28323826 PMCID: PMC5360223 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002254
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS Med ISSN: 1549-1277 Impact factor: 11.069
Demographic and clinical characteristics of participants in our samples from the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center, the Rotterdam Study, the Framingham Heart Study, and the Sacramento Area Latino Study on Aging.
| Characteristic | Cohort | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NACC ( | RS ( | FHS ( | SALSA ( | |
| 1,865 (36.7%) | 5,592 (87.4%) | 3,911 (95.9%) | 976 (75.5%) | |
| 3.96 (2.97) | 12.64 (6.14) | 17.59 (9.09) | 6.50 (2.52) | |
| 602 (11.9%) | 1,301 (20.3%) | 826 (20.3%) | 111 (8.6%) | |
| 55 (1.1%) | 782 (12.2%) | 658 (16.1%) | 49 (3.8%) | |
| 1,707 (33.6%) | 2,893 (45.2%) | 1,762 (43.2%) | 538 (41.6%) | |
| 68.7 (4.30) | 65.4 (4.18) | 62.0 (1.71) | 67.8 (4.42) | |
| 15.79 (2.99) | 12.94 (N/A) | 13.20 (N/A) | 7.72 (5.42) | |
| Less than high school | 140 (2.8%) | 728 (11.4%) | 622 (15.3%) | 835 (64.5%) |
| High school | 720 (14.2%) | 2,773 (43.3%) | 1,330 (32.6%) | 201 (15.5%) |
| Some college | 815 (16.1%) | 1,965 (30.7%) | 1,004 (24.6%) | 126 (9.7%) |
| College graduation | 3,379 (66.6%) | 871 (13.6%) | 994 (24.4%) | 125 (9.7%) |
| 17.8% | 15.0% | 11.7% | 7.5% | |
| e2/e2, e2/e3, e3/e3 | 3,431 (67.6%) | 4,598 (71.9%) | 3,166 (77.6%) | 1,112 (85.9%) |
| e2/e4, e3/e4 | 1,484 (29.3%) | 1,645 (25.7%) | 845 (20.7%) | 171 (13.2%) |
| e4/e4 | 158 (3.1%) | 156 (2.4%) | 67 (1.6%) | 11 (0.9%) |
| 2,957 (58.3%) | 1,191 (18.6%) | N/A | N/A | |
| 29.0 (1.3) | 28.5 (1.0) | 28.8 (1.4) | 86.7 (11.2) | |
| 1,262 (24.9%) | 2,759 (43.1%) | N/A | N/A | |
| 1.32 (1.06) | 1.82 (0.85) | 1.38 (0.94) | 2.13 (1.16) | |
| Low (0) | 1,264 (24.9%) | 263 (4.1%) | 702 (17.2%) | 70 (5.41%) |
| Moderate (1/2) | 3,096 (61.0%) | 4,916 (76.8%) | 2,923 (71.7%) | 737 (57.0%) |
| High (3/4/5/6) | 713 (14.1%) | 1,120 (19.1%) | 453 (11.1%) | 439 (33.9%) |
Data are given as n (percent), mean (standard deviation), or percent.
*For the Framingham Study and the Rotterdam Study, this refers to the age in years of the first study visit within the age 60–75-y window included in the present analyses. In the regression analyses, mean age in the Framingham Heart Study was 65.39 (standard deviation 3.87) because we used the first visit with available MMSE as the baseline (see text).
#In the Framingham Heart Study and the Rotterdam Study, the education variable was recorded as categories. To facilitate comparisons with other samples, the mean was estimated by considering less than high school as 10 y, high school as 12 y, some college as 14 y, and college graduate as 16 y. Education data for the NACC and SALSA cohorts were translated into the categories as follows: <12 y, less than high school; 12 y, high school; 13–15 y, some college; and ≥16 y, college graduation.
†Family history of dementia was not available in the SALSA and Framingham Heart Study cohorts.
‡MMSE (range [0, 30], with typical dementia cutoff at ~24); for SALSA, the 3MS was used (range [0,100], with typical dementia cutoff at ~77).
§Subjective memory concerns was not available in the SALSA and Framingham cohorts.
$Vascular risk score was calculated based on a count of standard risk factors, see text for details.
3MS, Modified Mini-Mental State Examination; FHS, Framingham Heart Study; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; MMSE, Mini-Mental State Examination; N/A, not available; NACC, National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center; RS, Rotterdam Study; SALSA, Sacramento Area Latino Study on Aging.
Fig 1Cumulative incidence curves, adjusting for competing risk of mortality, for mild cognitive impairment or dementia by baseline age and APOE-e4 dose.
Note that the strata shown are not independent for the Rotterdam and Framingham cohorts (see text). MCI, mild cognitive impairment; NACC, National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center; RS, Rotterdam Study; SALSA, Sacramento Area Latino Study on Aging.
Fig 2Cumulative incidence curves, adjusting for competing risk of mortality, for dementia by baseline age and APOE-e4 dose.
Note that the strata shown are not independent for the Rotterdam and Framingham cohorts (see text). NACC, National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center; RS, Rotterdam Study; SALSA, Sacramento Area Latino Study on Aging.
Fig 3Lifetime (to age 80–85 y) cumulative incidence curves, adjusting for competing risk of mortality, for mild cognitive impairment or dementia by baseline age and APOE-e4 dose.
Note that the strata shown are not independent (see text). MCI, mild cognitive impairment.
Fig 4Lifetime (to age 80–85 y) cumulative incidence curves, adjusting for competing risk of mortality, for dementia by baseline age and APOE-e4 dose.
Note that the strata shown are not independent (see text).
Five-year cumulative incidence of mild cognitive impairment/dementia by baseline age and APOE-e4 dose.
| Age (years) and | Cohort | Meta-analysis (RS, FHS, SALSA): 5-y cumulative incidence, percent (95% CI) | Meta-analysis (four cohorts): 5-y cumulative incidence, percent (95% CI) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NACC | RS | FHS | SALSA | |||||||
| 5-y cumulative incidence, percent (95% CI) | 5-y cumulative incidence, percent (95% CI) | 5-y cumulative incidence, percent (95% CI) | 5-y cumulative incidence, percent (95% CI) | |||||||
| 0 e4 | 740 | 7.94 (5.65, 11.10) | 2,625 | 4.08 (3.39, 4.91) | 2,955 | 0.31 (0.16, 0.59) | 352 | 2.29 (1.15, 4.53) | 1.46 (0.31, 6.72) | 2.29 (0.84, 6.21) |
| 1 e4 | 322 | 12.38 (8.14, 18.61) | 928 | 5.72 (4.40, 7.42) | 795 | 1.28 (0.69, 2.37) | 51 | 8.28 (3.15, 20.80) | 3.86 (1.32, 11.03) | 5.27 (2.24, 12.13) |
| 2 e4 | 36 | 23.06 (9.94, 48.12) | 102 | 5.88 (2.68, 12.67) | 62 | 5.07 (1.65, 15.04) | 3 | 0.00 (0.00, 0.00) | 5.60 (2.94, 10.53) | 9.10 (3.38, 23.23) |
| 0 e4 | 1,172 | 9.19 (7.28, 11.57) | 2,492 | 5.38 (4.56, 6.34) | 2,430 | 1.52 (1.10, 2.10) | 377 | 5.97 (3.93, 9.03) | 3.63 (1.34, 9.62) | 4.60 (1.85, 11.21) |
| 1 e4 | 585 | 14.40 (11.08, 18.61) | 906 | 8.84 (7.16, 10.89) | 646 | 3.02 (1.94, 4.70) | 60 | 3.45 (0.86, 13.28) | 4.84 (1.96, 11.67) | 6.75 (3.47, 12.97) |
| 2 e4 | 65 | 34.62 (20.15, 55.18) | 77 | 10.39 (5.31, 19.79) | 44 | 9.42 (3.60, 23.45) | 5 | 20.00 (2.45, 86.54) | 10.52 (6.19, 17.57) | 16.36 (7.27, 34.51) |
| 0 e4 | 1,519 | 15.16 (13.03, 17.61) | 2,212 | 8.42 (7.33, 9.65) | 1,888 | 3.71 (2.93, 4.68) | 383 | 5.88 (3.91, 8.80) | 5.71 (3.19, 10.13) | 7.37 (4.06, 13.19) |
| 1 e4 | 577 | 23.56 (19.48, 28.34) | 739 | 15.45 (13.03, 18.27) | 464 | 7.71 (5.60, 10.59) | 60 | 22.49 (13.63, 35.77) | 13.66 (7.88, 23.11) | 15.86 (10.02, 24.61) |
| 2 e4 | 57 | 38.34 (25.09, 55.48) | 59 | 18.64 (10.73, 31.28) | 32 | 23.16 (11.61, 43.01) | 3 | 33.33 (2.68, 99.76) | 20.58 (13.51, 30.65) | 26.70 (17.50, 39.45) |
*For the Framingham Heart Study and the Rotterdam Study, individuals could contribute to multiple baseline age strata. In the meta-analysis, cumulative incidence 0.00 (0.00, 0.00) was not used.
FHS, Framingham Heart Study; NACC, National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center; RS, Rotterdam Study; SALSA, Sacramento Area Latino Study on Aging.
Lifetime (to age 80–85 y) cumulative incidence of mild cognitive impairment/dementia by baseline age and APOE-e4 dose.
| Age (years) and APOE | Cohort | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RS | FHS | |||
| Lifetime cumulative incidence, percent (95% CI) | Lifetime cumulative incidence, percent (95% CI) | |||
| 0 e4 | 2,625 | 14.05 (12.50, 15.78) | 2,955 | 11.94 (10.56, 13.49) |
| 1 e4 | 928 | 25.37 (21.96, 29.21) | 795 | 22.07 (18.69, 25.94) |
| 2 e4 | 102 | 37.47 (25.11, 53.34) | 62 | 45.15 (31.32, 61.70) |
| 0 e4 | 2,492 | 14.23 (12.83, 15.76) | 2,430 | 12.22 (10.80, 13.81) |
| 1 e4 | 906 | 25.44 (22.50, 28.69) | 646 | 23.33 (19.76, 27.44) |
| 2 e4 | 77 | 38.09 (27.25, 51.46) | 44 | 46.66 (31.56, 64.65) |
| 0 e4 | 2,212 | 15.57 (14.11, 17.16) | 1,888 | 11.94 (10.43, 13.64) |
| 1 e4 | 739 | 26.14 (23.10, 29.51) | 464 | 21.35 (17.58, 25.80) |
| 2 e4 | 59 | 38.02 (26.76, 52.04) | 32 | 37.55 (22.42, 58.23) |
For age 60–64 y, lifetime cumulative incidence is estimated as 20-y cumulative incidence. For age 65–69 y, lifetime cumulative incidence is estimated as 15-y cumulative incidence. For age 70–75 y, lifetime cumulative incidence is estimated as 10-y cumulative incidence.
*Individuals could contribute to multiple baseline age strata.
FHS, Framingham Heart Study; RS, Rotterdam Study.
Five-year cumulative incidence of dementia by baseline age and APOE-e4 dose.
| Age (years) and | Cohort | Meta-analysis (RS, FHS, SALSA): 5-y cumulative incidence, percent (95% CI) | Meta-analysis (four cohorts): 5-y cumulative incidence, percent (95% CI) | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NACC | RS | FHS | SALSA | |||||||
| 5-y cumulative incidence, percent (95% CI) | 5-y cumulative incidence, percent (95% CI) | 5-y cumulative incidence, percent (95% CI) | 5-y cumulative incidence, percent (95% CI) | |||||||
| 0 e4 | 740 | 0.00 (0.00, 0.00) | 2,625 | 0.15 (0.06, 0.41) | 2,955 | 0.03 (0.00, 0.25) | 352 | 0.57 (0.14, 2.26) | 0.16 (0.04, 0.62) | 0.16 (0.04, 0.62) |
| 1 e4 | 322 | 0.54 (0.08, 3.79) | 928 | 0.54 (0.22, 1.29) | 795 | 0.00 (0.00,0.00) | 51 | 1.96 (0.27, 13.36) | 0.75 (0.25, 2.26) | 0.65 (0.31, 1.36) |
| 2 e4 | 36 | 0.00 (0.00, 0.00) | 102 | 2.94 (0.95, 8.89) | 62 | 0.00 (0.00,0.00) | 3 | 0.00 (0.00, 0.00) | 2.94 (0.95, 8.89) | 2.94 (0.95, 8.89) |
| 0 e4 | 1,172 | 0.38 (0.12, 1.23) | 2,492 | 0.52 (0.30, 0.90) | 2,430 | 0.25 (0.11, 0.56) | 377 | 0.90 (0.29, 2.79) | 0.46 (0.25, 0.86) | 0.45 (0.28, 0.72) |
| 1 e4 | 585 | 0.95 (0.30, 2.97) | 906 | 0.88 (0.44, 1.76) | 646 | 0.63 (0.24, 1.68) | 60 | 3.45 (0.86, 13.28) | 1.07 (0.48, 2.38) | 1.00 (0.56, 1.78) |
| 2 e4 | 65 | 4.36 (1.09, 16.60) | 77 | 5.19 (1.97, 13.33) | 44 | 4.76 (1.19, 18.00) | 5 | 0.00 (0.00, 0.00) | 5.05 (2.28, 10.96) | 4.87 (2.45, 9.56) |
| 0 e4 | 1,519 | 1.41 (0.81, 2.46) | 2,212 | 1.45 (1.03, 2.04) | 1,888 | 0.98 (0.62, 1.55) | 383 | 2.60 (1.35, 4.95) | 1.47 (0.93, 2.34) | 1.44 (1.03, 2.02) |
| 1 e4 | 577 | 3.02 (1.64, 5.55) | 739 | 6.51 (4.94, 8.54) | 464 | 3.09 (1.84, 5.17) | 60 | 6.79 (2.58, 17.24) | 5.06 (2.92, 8.69) | 4.47 (2.75, 7.22) |
| 2 e4 | 57 | 12.43 (5.25, 27.87) | 59 | 11.86 (5.80, 23.43) | 32 | 6.67 (1.67, 24.62) | 3 | 0.00 (0.00, 0.00) | 10.47 (5.55, 19.28) | 11.12 (6.68, 18.20) |
*For the Framingham Heart Study and the Rotterdam Study, individuals could contribute to multiple baseline age strata. In meta-analysis, cumulative incidence 0.00 (0.00, 0.00) was not used.
FHS, Framingham Heart Study; NACC, National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center; RS, Rotterdam Study; SALSA, Sacramento Area Latino Study on Aging.
Lifetime (to age 80–85 y) cumulative incidence of dementia by baseline age and APOE-e4 dose.
| Age (years) and APOE | Cohort | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| RS | FHS | |||
| “Lifetime” cumulative incidence, percent (95% CI) | “Lifetime” cumulative incidence, percent (95% CI) | |||
| 0 e4 | 2,625 | 6.83 (5.59, 8.33) | 2,955 | 6.22 (5.23, 7.40) |
| 1 e4 | 928 | 17.18 (14.06, 20.90) | 795 | 15.93 (12.98, 19.47) |
| 2 e4 | 102 | 34.69 (22.75, 50.49) | 62 | 38.49 (25.50, 55.17) |
| 0 e4 | 2,492 | 5.26 (4.37, 6.34) | 2,430 | 6.59 (5.53, 7.84) |
| 1 e4 | 906 | 15.36 (12.93, 18.20) | 646 | 16.22 (13.16, 19.92) |
| 2 e4 | 77 | 30.76 (20.74, 44.09) | 44 | 40.26 (25.75, 59.00) |
| 0 e4 | 2,212 | 5.76 (4.86, 6.83) | 1,888 | 5.65 (4.61, 6.91) |
| 1 e4 | 739 | 14.77 (12.38, 17.58) | 464 | 13.94 (10.82, 17.86) |
| 2 e4 | 59 | 33.30 (22.54, 47.37) | 32 | 35.17 (20.32, 56.27) |
For age 60–64 y, lifetime cumulative incidence is estimated as 20-y cumulative incidence. For age 65–69 y, lifetime cumulative incidence is estimated as 15-y cumulative incidence. For age 70–75 y, lifetime cumulative incidence is estimated as 10-y cumulative incidence.
*Individuals could contribute to multiple baseline age strata.
FHS, Framingham Heart Study; RS, Rotterdam Study.