1. Amyloid, cerebrovascular disease, and neurodegeneration biomarkers are associated with cognitive trajectories in a racially and ethnically diverse, community-based sample
- Author
-
Patrick J. Lao, Amelia K. Boehme, Clarissa Morales, Krystal K. Laing, Anthony Chesebro, Kay C. Igwe, Jose Gutierrez, Yian Gu, Yaakov Stern, Nicole Schupf, Jennifer J. Manly, Richard Mayeux, and Adam M. Brickman
- Subjects
Aged, 80 and over ,Male ,Amyloid ,Aging ,General Neuroscience ,Amyloidosis ,Neuropsychological Tests ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Article ,Cerebrovascular Disorders ,Cognition ,Alzheimer Disease ,Infarction ,Humans ,Cognitive Dysfunction ,Female ,Prospective Studies ,Neurology (clinical) ,Geriatrics and Gerontology ,Biomarkers ,Aged ,Developmental Biology - Abstract
We characterized the additive contribution of cerebrovascular biomarkers to amyloid and neurodegeneration biomarkers (AV(N)) when modeling prospective, longitudinal cognitive trajectories within 3 major racial/ethnic groups. Participants (n = 172; age = 69–96 years; 62% women; 31%/49%/20% Non–Hispanic White/Non–Hispanic Black/Hispanic) from the Washington Heights-Inwood Columbia Aging Project were assessed for amyloid (Florbetaben PET), neurodegeneration (cortical thickness, hippocampal volume), and cerebrovascular disease (white matter hyperintensity (WMH), infarcts). Neuropsychological assessments occurred every 2.3 ± 0.6 years for up to 6 visits (follow-up time: 4.2 ± 3.2 years). Linear mixed-effects models were stratified by race/ethnicity groups. Higher amyloid was associated with faster memory decline in all 3 racial/ethnic groups, but was related to faster cognitive decline beyond memory in minoritized racial/ethnic groups. Higher WMH was associated with faster language, processing speed/executive function, and visuospatial ability decline in Non–Hispanic Black participants, while infarcts were associated with faster processing speed/executive function decline in Non–Hispanic White participants. Complementary information from AD, neurodegenerative, and cerebrovascular biomarkers explain decline in multiple cognitive domains, which may differ within each racial/ethnic group. Importantly, treatment strategies exist to minimize vascular contributions to cognitive decline.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF