Djavad Mowafaghian Centre for Brain Health and Department of Psychology, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Women's Health Research Institute of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
Psychoneuroendocrinology. 2021 Jul;129:105248. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2021.105248. Epub 2021 Apr 29.
Alzheimer's disease (AD) is characterized by severe cognitive decline and pathological changes in the brain (brain atrophy, hyperphosphorylation of tau, and deposition of amyloid-beta protein). Females have greater neuropathology (AD biomarkers and brain atrophy rates) and cognitive decline than males, however these effects can depend on diagnosis (amnestic mild cognitive impairment (aMCI) or AD) and APOE genotype (presence of ε4 alleles). Using the ADNI database (N = 630 females, N = 830 males), we analyzed the effect of sex, APOE genotype (non-carriers or carriers of APOEε4 alleles), and diagnosis (cognitively normal (CN), early aMCI (EMCI), late aMCI (LMCI), probable AD) on cognition (memory and executive function), hippocampal volume, and AD biomarkers (CSF levels of amyloid beta, tau, and ptau). Regardless of APOE genotype, memory scores were higher in CN, EMCI, and LMCI females compared to males but this sex difference was absent in probable AD, which may suggest a delay in the onset of cognitive decline or diagnosis and/or a faster trajectory of cognitive decline in females. We found that, regardless of diagnosis, CSF tau-pathology was disproportionately elevated in female carriers of APOEε4 alleles compared to males. In contrast, male carriers of APOEε4 alleles had reduced levels of CSF amyloid beta compared to females, irrespective of diagnosis. We also detected sex differences in hippocampal volume but the direction was dependent on the method of correction. Altogether results suggest that across diagnosis females show greater memory decline compared to males and APOE genotype affects AD neuropathology differently in males and females which may influence sex differences in incidence and progression of aMCI and AD.
阿尔茨海默病(AD)的特征是严重的认知能力下降和大脑的病理性变化(脑萎缩、tau 过度磷酸化和淀粉样β蛋白沉积)。女性的神经病理学(AD 生物标志物和脑萎缩率)和认知能力下降比男性更严重,但这些影响可能取决于诊断(遗忘型轻度认知障碍(aMCI)或 AD)和 APOE 基因型(存在 ε4 等位基因)。我们使用 ADNI 数据库(N=630 名女性,N=830 名男性),分析了性别、APOE 基因型(非携带者或 APOEε4 等位基因携带者)和诊断(认知正常(CN)、早期 aMCI(EMCI)、晚期 aMCI(LMCI)、可能的 AD)对认知(记忆和执行功能)、海马体积和 AD 生物标志物(CSF 中淀粉样β、tau 和 ptau 水平)的影响。无论 APOE 基因型如何,CN、EMCI 和 LMCI 女性的记忆评分均高于男性,但在可能的 AD 中则没有这种性别差异,这可能表明女性认知衰退的发病或诊断延迟和/或认知衰退的速度更快。我们发现,无论诊断如何,APOEε4 等位基因女性携带者的 CSF tau 病理学均不成比例地升高,而与女性相比,APOEε4 等位基因男性携带者的 CSF 淀粉样β水平降低,无论诊断如何。我们还检测到海马体积的性别差异,但方向取决于校正方法。总的来说,结果表明,在整个诊断过程中,女性的记忆衰退比男性更明显,APOE 基因型对男性和女性的 AD 神经病理学的影响不同,这可能影响 aMCI 和 AD 的发病率和进展的性别差异。