Prediction of Alzheimer's disease biomarker status defined by the 'ATN framework' among cognitively healthy individuals: results from the EPAD longitudinal cohort study

被引:26
作者
Calvin, Catherine M. [1 ]
de Boer, Casper [2 ]
Raymont, Vanessa [1 ]
Gallacher, John [1 ]
Koychev, Ivan [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Oxford, Dept Psychiat, Warneford Hosp, Oxford OX3 7JX, England
[2] Amsterdam UMC, Alzheimer Ctr Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands
基金
英国医学研究理事会;
关键词
ATN framework; Risk scores; White matter lesions volume; VASCULAR RISK-FACTORS; AA RESEARCH FRAMEWORK; DEMENTIA RISK; BIOLOGICAL DEFINITION; SERUM-CHOLESTEROL; PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY; MIDLIFE; PROFILE; PATHOLOGIES; VALIDATION;
D O I
10.1186/s13195-020-00711-5
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Background The Amyloid/Tau/Neurodegeneration (ATN) framework has been proposed as a means of evidencing the biological state of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Predicting ATN status in pre-dementia individuals therefore provides an important opportunity for targeted recruitment into AD interventional studies. We investigated the extent to which ATN-defined biomarker status can be predicted by known AD risk factors as well as vascular-related composite risk scores. Methods One thousand ten cognitively healthy older adults were allocated to one of five ATN-defined biomarker categories. Multinomial logistic regression tested risk factors including age, sex, education, APOE4, family history of dementia, cognitive function, vascular risk indices (high systolic blood pressure, body mass index (BMI), high cholesterol, physical inactivity, ever smoked, blood pressure medication, diabetes, prior cardiovascular disease, atrial fibrillation and white matter lesion (WML) volume), and three vascular-related composite scores, to predict five ATN subgroups; ROC curve models estimated their added value in predicting pathology. Results Age, APOE4, family history, BMI, MMSE and white matter lesions (WML) volume differed between ATN biomarker groups. Prediction of Alzheimer's disease pathology (versus normal AD biomarkers) improved by 7% after adding family history, BMI, MMSE and WML to a ROC curve that included age, sex and APOE4. Risk composite scores did not add value. Conclusions ATN-defined Alzheimer's disease biomarker status prediction among cognitively healthy individuals is possible through a combination of constitutional and cardiovascular risk factors but established dementia composite risk scores do not appear to add value in this context.
引用
收藏
页数:16
相关论文
共 51 条
  • [1] Risk of dementia hospitalisation associated with cardiovascular risk factors in midlife and older age: the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) study
    Alonso, A.
    Mosley, T. H., Jr.
    Gottesman, R. F.
    Catellier, D.
    Sharrett, A. R.
    Coresh, J.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NEUROLOGY NEUROSURGERY AND PSYCHIATRY, 2009, 80 (11) : 1194 - 1201
  • [2] Regional White Matter Hyperintensity Volume, Not Hippocampal Atrophy, Predicts Incident Alzheimer Disease in the Community
    Brickman, Adam M.
    Provenzano, Frank A.
    Muraskin, Jordan
    Manly, Jennifer J.
    Blum, Sonja
    Apa, Zoltan
    Stern, Yaakov
    Brown, Truman R.
    Luchsinger, Jose A.
    Mayeux, Richard
    [J]. ARCHIVES OF NEUROLOGY, 2012, 69 (12) : 1621 - 1627
  • [3] Application of the NIA-AA Research Framework: Towards a Biological Definition of Alzheimer's Disease using Cerebrospinal Fluid Biomarkers in the AIBL Study
    Burnham, S. C.
    Coloma, P. M.
    Li, Q-X
    Collins, S.
    Savage, G.
    Laws, S.
    Doecke, J.
    Maruff, P.
    Martins, R. N.
    Ames, D.
    Rowe, C. C.
    Masters, C. L.
    Villemagne, V. L.
    [J]. JPAD-JOURNAL OF PREVENTION OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE, 2019, 6 (04): : 248 - 255
  • [4] Digital technologies for the assessment of cognition: a clinical review
    Chinner, Amy
    Blane, Jasmine
    Lancaster, Claire
    Hinds, Chris
    Koychev, Ivan
    [J]. EVIDENCE-BASED MENTAL HEALTH, 2018, 21 (02) : 67 - 71
  • [5] Practical use of visual medial temporal lobe atrophy cut-off scores in Alzheimer's disease: Validation in a large memory clinic population
    Claus, Jules J.
    Staekenborg, Salka S.
    Holl, Dana C.
    Roorda, Jelmen J.
    Schuur, Jacqueline
    Koster, Pieter
    Tielkes, Caroline E. M.
    Scheltens, Philip
    [J]. EUROPEAN RADIOLOGY, 2017, 27 (08) : 3147 - 3155
  • [6] General cardiovascular risk profile for use in primary care - The Framingham Heart Study
    D'Agostino, Ralph B.
    Vasan, Ramachandran S.
    Pencina, Michael J.
    Wolf, Philip A.
    Cobain, Mark
    Massaro, Joseph M.
    Kannel, William B.
    [J]. CIRCULATION, 2008, 117 (06) : 743 - 753
  • [7] STROKE RISK PROFILE - ADJUSTMENT FOR ANTIHYPERTENSIVE MEDICATION - THE FRAMINGHAM-STUDY
    DAGOSTINO, RB
    WOLF, PA
    BELANGER, AJ
    KANNEL, WB
    [J]. STROKE, 1994, 25 (01) : 40 - 43
  • [8] Cerebral Hemodynamics and Vascular Risk Factors: Setting the Stage for Alzheimer's Disease
    de la Torre, Jack C.
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE, 2012, 32 (03) : 553 - 567
  • [9] Framingham stroke risk profile and lowered cognitive performance
    Elias, MF
    Sullivan, LM
    D'Agostino, RB
    Elias, PK
    Beiser, A
    Au, R
    Seshadri, S
    DeCarli, C
    Wolf, PA
    [J]. STROKE, 2004, 35 (02) : 404 - 409
  • [10] Body mass index, diet, physical inactivity, and the incidence of dementia in 1 million UK women
    Floud, Sarah
    Simpson, Rachel F.
    Balkwill, Angela
    Brown, Anna
    Goodill, Adrian
    Gallacher, John
    Sudlow, Cathie
    Harris, Phillip
    Hofman, Albert
    Parish, Sarah
    Reeves, Gillian K.
    Green, Jane
    Peto, Richard
    Beral, Valerie
    [J]. NEUROLOGY, 2020, 94 (02) : E123 - E132