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February 2023; 9 (1) Research ArticleOpen Access

Neuropathology-Independent Association Between APOE Genotype and Cognitive Decline Rate in the Normal Aging-Early Alzheimer Continuum

Jing Qian, Yiding Zhang, View ORCID ProfileRebecca A. Betensky, View ORCID ProfileBradley T. Hyman, View ORCID ProfileAlberto Serrano-Pozo
First published January 20, 2023, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1212/NXG.0000000000200055
Jing Qian
From the University of Massachusetts School of Public Health & Health Sciences (J.Q., Y.Z.), Amherst; Massachusetts General Hospital Biostatistics Center (J.Q.), Boston; New York University School of Global Public Health (R.A.B.); New York University Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (R.A.B.); Massachusetts General Hospital Neurology Department (B.T.H., A.S.-P.), Boston; Massachusetts Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (B.T.H., A.S.-P.), Charlestown; and Harvard Medical School (B.T.H., A.S.-P.), Boston, MA.
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Yiding Zhang
From the University of Massachusetts School of Public Health & Health Sciences (J.Q., Y.Z.), Amherst; Massachusetts General Hospital Biostatistics Center (J.Q.), Boston; New York University School of Global Public Health (R.A.B.); New York University Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (R.A.B.); Massachusetts General Hospital Neurology Department (B.T.H., A.S.-P.), Boston; Massachusetts Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (B.T.H., A.S.-P.), Charlestown; and Harvard Medical School (B.T.H., A.S.-P.), Boston, MA.
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Rebecca A. Betensky
From the University of Massachusetts School of Public Health & Health Sciences (J.Q., Y.Z.), Amherst; Massachusetts General Hospital Biostatistics Center (J.Q.), Boston; New York University School of Global Public Health (R.A.B.); New York University Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (R.A.B.); Massachusetts General Hospital Neurology Department (B.T.H., A.S.-P.), Boston; Massachusetts Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (B.T.H., A.S.-P.), Charlestown; and Harvard Medical School (B.T.H., A.S.-P.), Boston, MA.
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  • ORCID record for Rebecca A. Betensky
Bradley T. Hyman
From the University of Massachusetts School of Public Health & Health Sciences (J.Q., Y.Z.), Amherst; Massachusetts General Hospital Biostatistics Center (J.Q.), Boston; New York University School of Global Public Health (R.A.B.); New York University Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (R.A.B.); Massachusetts General Hospital Neurology Department (B.T.H., A.S.-P.), Boston; Massachusetts Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (B.T.H., A.S.-P.), Charlestown; and Harvard Medical School (B.T.H., A.S.-P.), Boston, MA.
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Alberto Serrano-Pozo
From the University of Massachusetts School of Public Health & Health Sciences (J.Q., Y.Z.), Amherst; Massachusetts General Hospital Biostatistics Center (J.Q.), Boston; New York University School of Global Public Health (R.A.B.); New York University Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (R.A.B.); Massachusetts General Hospital Neurology Department (B.T.H., A.S.-P.), Boston; Massachusetts Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (B.T.H., A.S.-P.), Charlestown; and Harvard Medical School (B.T.H., A.S.-P.), Boston, MA.
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Citation
Neuropathology-Independent Association Between APOE Genotype and Cognitive Decline Rate in the Normal Aging-Early Alzheimer Continuum
Jing Qian, Yiding Zhang, Rebecca A. Betensky, Bradley T. Hyman, Alberto Serrano-Pozo
Neurol Genet Feb 2023, 9 (1) e200055; DOI: 10.1212/NXG.0000000000200055

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Abstract

Background and Objectives We previously found that the APOE genotype affects the rate of cognitive decline in mild-to-moderate Alzheimer disease (AD) dementia independently of its effects on AD neuropathologic changes (ADNC) and copathologies. In this study, we tested the hypothesis that the APOE alleles differentially affect the rate of cognitive decline at the normal aging-early AD continuum and that this association is independent of their effects on classical ADNC and copathologies.

Methods We analyzed APOE associations with the cognitive trajectories (Clinical Dementia Rating scale Sum of Boxes [CDR-SOB] and Mini-Mental State Examination [MMSE]) of more than 1,000 individuals from a national clinicopathologic sample who had either no, mild (sparse neuritic plaques and the Braak neurofibrillary tangle [NFT] stage I/II), or intermediate (moderate neuritic plaques and the Braak NFT stage III/IV) ADNC levels at autopsy via 2 latent classes reverse-time longitudinal modeling.

Results Carrying the APOEε4 allele was associated with a faster rate of cognitive decline by both CDR-SOB and MMSE relative to APOEε3 homozygotes. This association remained statistically significant after adjusting for ADNC severity, comorbid pathologies, and the effects of ADNC on the slope of cognitive decline. Our modeling strategy identified 2 latent classes in which APOEε4 carriers declined faster than APOEε3 homozygotes, with latent class 1 members representing slow decliners (CDR-SOB: 76.7% of individuals, 0.195 vs 0.146 points/y in APOEε4 vs APOEε3/ε3; MMSE: 88.6% of individuals, −0.303 vs −0.153 points/y in APOEε4 vs APOEε3/ε3), whereas latent class 2 members were fast decliners (CDR-SOB: 23.3% of participants, 1.536 vs 1.487 points/y in APOEε4 vs APOEε3/ε3; MMSE: 11.4% of participants, −2.538 vs −2.387 points/y in APOEε4 vs APOEε3/ε3). Compared with slow decliners, fast decliners were more likely to carry the APOEε4 allele, younger at initial visit and death, more impaired at initial and last visits, and more likely to have intermediate (vs none or mild) ADNC levels, as well as concurrent Lewy bodies and hippocampal sclerosis at autopsy.

Discussion In a large national sample selected to represent the normal aging-early AD continuum, the APOEε4 allele is associated with a modest but statistically significant acceleration of the cognitive decline rate even after controlling for its effects on ADNC and comorbid pathologies.

Glossary

AD=
Alzheimer disease;
ADNC=
AD neuropathologic changes;
CAA=
cerebral amyloid angiopathy;
CDR-SOB=
Clinical Dementia Rating scale Sum Of Boxes;
HScl=
hippocampal sclerosis;
MMSE=
Mini-Mental State Examination;
NACC=
National Alzheimer Coordinating Center;
NFTs=
neurofibrillary tangles;
NP=
neuritic plaque;
TDP-43=
transactive response DNA-binding protein of 43 kDa;
UDS=
Uniform Data Set

Footnotes

  • Funding information and disclosures are provided at the end of the article. Full disclosure form information provided by the authors is available with the full text of this article at Neurology.org/NG.

  • The Article Processing Charge was funded by the authors.

  • Submitted and externally peer reviewed. The handling editor was Associate Editor Suman Jayadev, MD.

  • Received August 22, 2022.
  • Accepted in final form November 16, 2022.
  • Copyright © 2023 The Author(s). Published by Wolters Kluwer Health, Inc. on behalf of the American Academy of Neurology.

This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives License 4.0 (CC BY-NC-ND), which permits downloading and sharing the work provided it is properly cited. The work cannot be changed in any way or used commercially without permission from the journal.

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