| Literature DB >> 28826181 |
Tormod Fladby1,2, Lene Pålhaugen1,2, Per Selnes1,2, Knut Waterloo3,4, Geir Bråthen5,6, Erik Hessen1,7, Ina Selseth Almdahl1,2, Kjell-Arne Arntzen3,8, Eirik Auning9, Carl Fredrik Eliassen1,7, Ragna Espenes3,4, Ramune Grambaite1, Gøril Rolfseng Grøntvedt5,6, Krisztina Kunszt Johansen1, Stein Harald Johnsen3,8, Lisa Flem Kalheim1,2, Bjørn-Eivind Kirsebom3,4, Kai Ivar Müller10,11, Arne Exner Nakling12,13, Arvid Rongve14,15, Sigrid Botne Sando5,6, Nikias Siafarikas9, Ane Løvli Stav1,2, Sandra Tecelao16, Santiago Timon1, Svein Ivar Bekkelund10,11, Dag Aarsland1,13,17.
Abstract
While APOEɛ4 is the major genetic risk factor for Alzheimer's disease (AD), amyloid dysmetabolism is an initial or early event predicting clinical disease and is an important focus for secondary intervention trials. To improve identification of cases with increased AD risk, we evaluated recruitment procedures using pathological CSF concentrations of Aβ42 (pAβ) and APOEɛ4 as risk markers in a multi-center study in Norway. In total, 490 subjects aged 40-80 y were included after response to advertisements and media coverage or memory clinics referrals. Controls (n = 164) were classified as normal controls without first-degree relatives with dementia (NC), normal controls with first-degree relatives with dementia (NCFD), or controls scoring below norms on cognitive screening. Patients (n = 301) were classified as subjective cognitive decline or mild cognitive impairment. Subjects underwent a clinical and cognitive examination and MRI according to standardized protocols. Core biomarkers in CSF from 411 and APOE genotype from 445 subjects were obtained. Cases (both self-referrals (n = 180) and memory clinics referrals (n = 87)) had increased fractions of pAβ and APOEɛ4 frequency compared to NC. Also, NCFD had higher APOEɛ4 frequencies without increased fraction of pAβ compared to NC, and cases recruited from memory clinics had higher fractions of pAβ and APOEɛ4 frequency than self-referred. This study shows that memory clinic referrals are pAβ enriched, whereas self-referred and NCFD cases more frequently are pAβ negative but at risk (APOEɛ4 positive), suitable for primary intervention.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; amyloid; apolipoprotein E4; biomarkers; cerebrospinal fluid; mild cognitive impairment; subjective cognitive decline
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28826181 PMCID: PMC5611830 DOI: 10.3233/JAD-170231
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alzheimers Dis ISSN: 1387-2877 Impact factor: 4.472
Demographic characteristics, cognitive test results, APOE alleles and CSF Aβ pathology of the control and symptomatic subjects classified by cognitive stage
| Control subjects | Subjects with cognitive | |||||
| symptoms | ||||||
| Total | Without | With family | Abnormal | SCD | MCI | |
| family | history | cognitive | ||||
| History | Screening | |||||
| Age at inclusion (SD) | 62.9 (9.4) | 63.2 (9.6) | 58.9 (8.9) | 65.2 (7.6) | 62.3 (8.9) | 65.4 (9.8) |
| Female/Total | 253/465 | 22/46 | 53/86 | 21/32 | 93/164 | 64/137 |
| 54.4% | 47.8% | 61.6% | 65.6% | 56.7% | 46.7% | |
| Education level (IQR) | 3.0 (1.0) | 3.0 (2.0) | 3.0 (2.0) | 2.0 (2.0) | 3.0 (3.0) | 3.0 (2.0) |
| MMSE (IQR) | 29.0 (2.0) | 29.0 (1.0) | 30.0 (1.0) | 28.0 (2.0) | 29.0 (1.0) | 28.0 (3.0) |
| CERAD word list recall | 48.9 (14.0) | 50.1 (13.6) | 57.9 (8.7) | 48.3 (11.5) | 53.1 (10.3) | 37.5 (14.4) |
| T-score (SD) | ||||||
| VOSP silhouettes | 49.2 (11.1) | 50.6 (8.0) | 53.8 (9.2) | 43.1 (13.6) | 52.3 (9.8) | 43.6 (10.9) |
| T-score (SD) | ||||||
| TMT-B | 47.5 (10.2) | 53.7 (8.3) | 50.5 (8.9) | 44.2 (7.9) | 49.6 (8.7) | 41.3 (11.0) |
| T-score (SD) | ||||||
| COWAT | 48.9 (9.8) | 51.1 (6.8) | 50.2 (8.1) | 43.7 (10.1) | 51.5 (9.9) | 45.6 (10.1) |
| T-score (SD) | ||||||
| GDS score (IQR) | 1.0 (3.0) | 0.0 (1.0) | 0.0 (1.0) | 0.5 (1.0) | 2.0 (3.0) | 3.0 (3.0) |
| 196/430 | 9/43 | 45/82 | 12/32 | 64/147 | 66/126 | |
| 45.6% | 20.9% | 54.9% | 37.5% | 43.5% | 52.4% | |
| 25.7% | 10.5% | 28.7% | 20.3% | 24.8% | 31.3% | |
| 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | 0 (0.0%) | |
| – | – | – | – | |||
| 35 (8.1%) | 7 (16.3%) | 2 (2.4%) | 6 (18.8%) | 14 (9.5%) | 6 (4.8%) | |
| 199 (46.3%) | 27 (62.8%) | 35 (42.7%) | 14 (43.8%) | 69 (46.9%) | 54 (42.9%) | |
| 15 (3.5%) | 1 (2.3%) | 6 (7.3%) | 1 (3.1%) | 3 (2.0%) | 4 (3.2%) | |
| 156 (36.3%) | 8 (18.6%) | 37 (45.1%) | 10 (31.3%) | 52 (35.4%) | 49 (38.9%) | |
| 25 (5.8%) | 0 (0.0%) | 2 (2.4%) | 1 (3.1%) | 9 (6.1%) | 13 (10.3%) | |
| CSF Aβ42 positivity | 89/393 | 2/39 | 4/62 | 6/25 | 24/145 | 53/122 |
| 22.7% | 5.1% | 6.5% | 24.0% | 16.6% | 43.4% | |
Continuous variables of assumed normal distribution (age at inclusion, CERAD word list recall T-score, VOSP silhouettes T-score, TMT-B T-score, and COWAT T-score) are summarized by mean (standard deviation) and compared with one-way ANOVA with predefined contrasts (a). Continuous variables of non-normal distribution (MMSE and GDS) and the ordinal variable (education level) are described by median (interquartile range) and compared with Mann-Whitney U tests (b). Binary variables (sex, APOE ɛ4 positivity, APOE ɛ4 allele frequency, APOE allele distribution and CSF pAβ positivity) are described with observed numbers and percentages and compared with Pearson’s Chi square tests (c) or Fisher’s exact tests when expected count is less than 5 (d).
Demographic characteristics, distribution of cognitive stage (SCD, MCI) for symptomatic subject groups, APOE alleles and CSF Aβ pathology of the control and symptomatic subjects classified by recruitment method
| Control subjects | Subjects with cognitive symptoms | ||||||
| Without | With | Abnormal | Recruited | Self- | Memory | Self-versus | |
| family | family | cognitive | as control | referral | clinic | memory | |
| history | history | screening | subjects | referral | clinic referral | ||
| Age at inclusion (SD) | 63.2 (9.6) | 58.9 (8.9) | 65.2 (7.6) | 66.6 (6.5) | 64.4 (9.7) | 61.5 (9.1) | |
| Female/Total | 22/46 | 53/86 | 21/32 | 5/11 | 97/180 | 46/87 | |
| 47.8 % | 61.6 % | 65.6 % | 45.5 % | 53.9 % | 52.9 % | ||
| Education level (IQR) | 3.0 (2.0) | 3.0 (2.0) | 2.0 (2.0) | 2.0 (2.0) | 3.0 (2.0) | 2.5 (2.0) | |
| MMSE (IQR) | 29.0 (1.0) | 30.0 (1.0) | 28.0 (2.0) | 27.5 (2.0) | 29.0 (2.0) | 29.0 (3.0) | |
| SCD | – | – | – | 3/11 | 110/180 | 41/87 | |
| 27.3 % | 61.1 % | 47.1 % | |||||
| MCI | – | – | – | 8/11 | 70/180 | 46/87 | |
| 72.7 % | 38.9 % | 52.9 % | |||||
| 9/43 | 45/82 | 12/32 | 2/11 | 71/160 | 50/79 | ||
| 20.9 % | 54.9 % | 37.5 % | 18.2 % | 44.4 % | 63.3 % | ||
| 10.5 % | 28.7 % | 20.3 % | 9.1 % | 25.0 % | 38.0 % | ||
| CSF Aβ42 positive | 2/39 | 4/62 | 6/25 | 1/11 | 37/155 | 29/79 | |
| 5.1 % | 6.5 % | 24.0 % | 9.1 % | 23.9 % | 36.7 % | ||
The continuous variable of assumed normal distribution (age at inclusion) is summarized by mean (standard deviation) and compared with one-way ANOVA with predefined contrasts (a). The continuous variable of non-normal distribution (MMSE) and the ordinal variable (education level) are described by median (interquartile range) and compared with Mann-Whitney U tests (b). Binary variables (sex, APOE ɛ4 positivity, APOE ɛ4 allele frequency, and CSF pAβ positivity) are described with observed numbers and percentages and compared with Pearson’s Chi square tests (c) or Fisher’s exact tests when expected count is less than 5 (d).
Fig.1Initially 577 subjects were considered for inclusion, whereof 87 did not fulfill inclusion criteria or withdrew before finishing the assessment program. 465 subjects were staged, as either normal controls (NC), normal controls with first degree relative (NCFD), controls with abnormal cognitive screening results (ACS), subjective cognitive decline (SCD) or mild cognitive impairment (MCI). At the time of analysis, APOE genotyping was available for 445 subjects, whereof 202 were APOE ɛ4 positive. Cerebrospinal fluid data was available for 411 subjects, whereof 96 subjects had pathological levels of Aβ42.