Aslan Daniel H, Sayre M Katherine, Bharadwaj Pradyumna K, Ally Madeline, Maltagliati Silvio, Lai Mark H C, Wilcox Rand R, Klimentidis Yann C, Alexander Gene E, Raichlen David A
Human and Evolutionary Biology Section, Department of Biological Sciences, University of Southern California, CA.
Department of Anthropology, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA.
Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2025 Jun 1;57(6):1212-1220. doi: 10.1249/MSS.0000000000003646. Epub 2025 Jan 9.
This study aimed to investigate whether self-reported walking pace (a marker of physical function) and the presence of APOE-ε4 allele interact to modify brain health outcomes.
We used data from a prospective cohort study of middle-aged to older adults from the UK Biobank who self-reported walking pace (slow or steady-to-brisk) and who were initially free of dementia ( n = 415,110). Incident all-cause dementia was obtained from hospital and death registry records, and structural brain volumes (right and left hippocampus volumes, total gray matter volume, and volume of white matter hyperintensities) were measured from a subset of participants ( n = 33,113). Cox proportional hazard models and generalized linear models were used to assess associations between exposures and outcomes.
Slow walking pace and the presence of APOE-ε4 allele were associated with increased dementia risk (HR = 1.79 [95% CI = 1.66-1.93], P < 0.001; HR = 3.06 [2.90-3.23], P < 0.001, respectively), and there was an interaction between these associations, indicating that the association of walking pace with dementia risk is modified by APOE-ε4 status (reference group: HR Steady-Brisk/APOE-ε4- = 1; HR Slow/APOE-ε4- = 2.03 [1.84-2.25], P < 0.001; HR Steady-Brisk/APOE-ε4+ = 3.21 [3.02-3.41], P < 0.001; HR Slow/APOE-ε4+ = 4.99 [4.48-5.58], P < 0.001). Slow self-reported walking pace was associated with worse brain volume outcomes, and these associations were not modified by APOE-ε4 genotype.
These results suggest walking pace and APOE-ε4 status independently influence brain volume outcomes, but both factors independently and jointly contribute to increased dementia risk. Individuals with both risk factors (slow walking pace and APOE-ε4 allele) show the strongest associations with dementia risk.
本研究旨在调查自我报告的步行速度(身体功能的一个指标)与APOE-ε4等位基因的存在是否相互作用,以改变脑健康结局。
我们使用了来自英国生物银行一项针对中年至老年成年人的前瞻性队列研究的数据,这些参与者自我报告了步行速度(慢或稳定至轻快),且最初无痴呆症(n = 415,110)。全因性痴呆症的发病情况来自医院和死亡登记记录,并且从一部分参与者(n = 33,113)中测量了脑结构体积(右侧和左侧海马体体积、总灰质体积以及白质高信号体积)。使用Cox比例风险模型和广义线性模型来评估暴露因素与结局之间的关联。
步行速度慢和存在APOE-ε4等位基因均与痴呆症风险增加相关(风险比分别为1.79 [95%置信区间 = 1.66 - 1.93],P < 0.001;风险比为3.06 [2.90 - 3.23],P < 0.001),并且这些关联之间存在相互作用,表明步行速度与痴呆症风险的关联因APOE-ε4状态而改变(参照组:稳定至轻快步行速度/无APOE-ε4 = 1;慢步行速度/无APOE-ε4 = 2.03 [1.84 - 2.25],P < 0.001;稳定至轻快步行速度/有APOE-ε4 = 3.21 [3.02 - 3.41],P < 0.001;慢步行速度/有APOE-ε4 = 4.99 [4.48 - 5.58],P < 0.001)。自我报告的慢步行速度与较差的脑体积结局相关,并且这些关联未因APOE-ε4基因型而改变。
这些结果表明步行速度和APOE-ε4状态独立影响脑体积结局,但这两个因素独立且共同导致痴呆症风险增加。同时具有两个风险因素(慢步行速度和APOE-ε4等位基因)的个体与痴呆症风险表现出最强的关联。