Empirically derived psychosocial‐behavioral phenotypes in Black/African American and Hispanic/Latino older adults enrolled in HABS‐HD: Associations with AD biomarkers and cognitive outcomes

Author:

Clark Alexandra L.12ORCID,Thomas Kelsey R.23,Ortega Nazareth1,Haley Andreana P.1,Duarte Audrey1,O'Bryant Sid45,

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology The University of Texas at Austin Austin Texas USA

2. Research Service VA San Diego Healthcare System San Diego California USA

3. Department of Psychiatry University of California San Diego Medical School La Jolla California USA

4. Institute for Translational Research University of North Texas Health Science Center Fort Worth Texas USA

5. Department of Family Medicine University of North Texas Health Science Center Fort Worth Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractINTRODUCTIONIdentification of psychosocial‐behavioral phenotypes to understand within‐group heterogeneity in risk and resiliency to Alzheimer's disease (AD) within Black/African American and Hispanic/Latino older adults is essential for the implementation of precision health approaches.METHODSA cluster analysis was performed on baseline measures of socioeconomic resources (annual income, social support, occupational complexity) and psychiatric distress (chronic stress, depression, anxiety) for 1220 racially/ethnically minoritized adults enrolled in the Health and Aging Brain Study‐Health Disparities (HABS‐HD). Analyses of covariance adjusting for sociodemographic factors examined phenotype differences in cognition and plasma AD biomarkers.RESULTSThe cluster analysis identified (1) Low Resource/High Distress (n = 256); (2) High Resource/Low Distress (n = 485); and (3) Low Resource/Low Distress (n = 479) phenotypes. The Low Resource/High Distress phenotype displayed poorer cognition and higher plasma neurofilament light chain; differences between the High Resource/Low Distress and Low Resource/Low Distress phenotypes were minimal.DISCUSSIONThe identification of psychosocial‐behavioral phenotypes within racially/ethnically minoritized older adults is crucial to the development of targeted AD prevention and intervention efforts.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Geriatrics and Gerontology,Neurology (clinical),Developmental Neuroscience,Health Policy,Epidemiology

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