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检查种族和性别差异对神经心理衰退和阿尔茨海默病发展的预测作用。

Examination of race and gender differences in predictors of neuropsychological decline and development of Alzheimer's disease.

机构信息

Psychology, Ohio University, Athens, OH00, USA.

出版信息

Clin Neuropsychol. 2022 Feb;36(2):327-352. doi: 10.1080/13854046.2021.1940299. Epub 2021 Jul 5.

Abstract

Black adults are diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease (AD) at higher rates than White adults. Biopsychosocial risk factors that differentially affect individuals by race, including health, education, and APOE e4, may explain these findings. Some research suggests that the risk for AD associated with the APOE e4 allele may differ by race. Gender differences in AD have also been identified but remain understudied. We examined race, APOE status, vascular risk factors, education, and the interaction of APOE e4 status and race as predictors of cognitive decline and the development of Alzheimer's disease between genders in a large longitudinal sample of older adults. Participants (N = 4336) were selected from the National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center's Uniform Data Set who completed measures of verbal fluency, naming, and immediate/delayed story memory across 5 years. Analyses were stratified by gender. Follow up interactions examined statistical significance of differences. APOE e4 by race interactions were largely non-significant and dropped from most models. When controlling for health, education, referral source, and Uniform Data Set form (when applicable), few racial differences in cognitive performance over time emerged. Black participants obtained lower scores than White participants on a majority of baseline measures. Race findings did not differ by gender. Hypertension was more strongly predictive of decline in delayed memory among women. Analyses did not support that APOE e4 differentially affects Black individuals. Hypertension may be a more relevant risk factor among women. Results raise questions regarding the accuracy of baseline scores in predicting decline for Black individuals.

摘要

黑人成年人被诊断出患有阿尔茨海默病(AD)的比率高于白人成年人。种族差异影响个体的生物心理社会风险因素,包括健康、教育和 APOE e4,这些因素可能解释了这些发现。一些研究表明,APOE e4 等位基因与 AD 相关的风险可能因种族而异。AD 中的性别差异也已被确定,但研究仍不够充分。我们在一个大型纵向老年样本中研究了种族、APOE 状态、血管危险因素、教育以及 APOE e4 状态和种族的相互作用,作为预测认知能力下降和男女两性阿尔茨海默病发展的因素。参与者(N=4336)从国家阿尔茨海默病协调中心的统一数据集中选择,他们在 5 年内完成了语言流畅性、命名和即时/延迟故事记忆的测量。分析按性别分层。随访交互检验了差异的统计学意义。APOE e4 与种族的相互作用大多不显著,并且在大多数模型中被剔除。在控制健康、教育、转诊来源和统一数据集中的表格(适用时)后,随着时间的推移,认知表现方面的种族差异很小。黑人参与者在大多数基线测量中得分低于白人参与者。种族差异不因性别而异。高血压对女性延迟记忆下降的预测作用更强。分析不支持 APOE e4 对黑人个体有不同的影响。高血压可能是女性更相关的风险因素。结果提出了关于基线分数预测黑人个体下降准确性的问题。

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