作者
Theresa M. Harrison,Tyler J. Ward,Jacinda Taggett,Pauline Maillard,Samuel N. Lockhart,Youngkyoo Jung,Laura Lovato,Robert A. Koeppe,William J. Jagust,Danielle Harvey,Joseph C. Masdeu,Hwamee Oh,Darren R. Gitelman,Neelum T. Aggarwal,Mark A. Espeland,Maryjo Cleveland,Rachel A. Whitmer,Sarah Tomaszewski Farias,Stephen Salloway,Valory Pavlik,Melissa Yu,Christy Tangney,Heather M. Snyder,María C. Carrillo,Laura D. Baker,Prashanthi Vemuri,Charles DeCarli,Susan Landau
摘要
Abstract INTRODUCTION The U.S. Study to Protect Brain Health Through Lifestyle Intervention to Reduce Risk (U.S. POINTER) is evaluating lifestyle interventions in older adults at risk for cognitive decline and dementia. Here we characterize the baseline data set of the POINTER Imaging ancillary study. METHODS Participants underwent health and cognitive assessments and neuroimaging with multimodal positron emission tomography (PET) (beta‐amyloid [Aβ] and tau) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Framingham risk score (FRS) was used to quantify cardiovascular disease (CVD) risk. RESULTS A total of 1052 participants (31% from underrepresented ethnoracial groups) were enrolled. Compared to Aβ−, Aβ+ (29%) participants were older, had higher apolipoprotein E ( APOE ) ε4 carriage rate and white matter hyperintensity volume, and greater temporal tau. FRS was related to MRI measures, but not AD biomarkers. FRS and tau had independent effects on cognition. DISCUSSION In this heterogenous, at‐risk cohort, CVD risk was related to more abnormal brain structure and poorer cognition, representing a putative non‐AD (Alzheimer's disease) pathway to brain injury and cognitive decline. Highlights The U.S. Study to Protect Brain Health Through Lifestyle Intervention to Reduce Risk (U.S. POINTER) cohort is enriched for cardiovascular disease (CVD) and poor lifestyle POINTER Imaging collected multimodal neuroimaging data in this unique, at‐risk cohort Amyloid burden was related to age, apolipoprotein E ( APOE ) ε4 carriage, and measures of disease progression Associations between amyloid and tau, and tau and cognition, were relatively weak CVD risk and tau pathology were independently related to memory