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Contributions of rare and common variation to early-onset and atypical dementia risk

Authors :
Carter A. Wright
Jared W. Taylor
Meagan Cochran
James M.J. Lawlor
Belle A. Moyers
Michelle D. Amaral
Zachary T. Bonnstetter
Princess Carter
Veronika Solomon
Richard M. Myers
Marissa Natelson Love
David S. Geldmacher
Sara J. Cooper
Erik D. Roberson
J. Nicholas Cochran
Source :
medRxiv
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

We collected and analyzed genomic sequencing data from individuals with clinician- diagnosed early-onset or atypical dementia. Thirty-two patients were previously described, with sixty-eight newly described in this report. Of those sixty-eight, sixty-two patients reported Caucasian, non-Hispanic ethnicity and six reported as African American, non-Hispanic. Fifty-three percent of patients had a returnable variant. Five patients harbored a pathogenic variant as defined by the American College of Medical Genetics criteria for pathogenicity. A polygenic risk score was calculated for Alzheimer’s patients in the total cohort and compared to the scores of a late-onset Alzheimer’s cohort and a control set. Patients with early-onset Alzheimer’s had higher non-APOEpolygenic risk scores than patients with late onset Alzheimer’s, supporting the conclusion that both rare and common genetic variation associate with early-onset neurodegenerative disease risk.

Subjects

Subjects :
Article

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
medRxiv
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....17720649a22487298874f8bd9160d67c