Prepandemic Alzheimer Disease Biomarkers and Anxious-Depressive Symptoms During the COVID-19 Confinement in Cognitively Unimpaired Adults

Author:

Akinci Muge,Peña-Gómez Cleofé,Operto Gregory,Fuentes-Julian Sherezade,Deulofeu Carme,Sánchez-Benavides Gonzalo,Milà-Alomà Marta,Grau-Rivera Oriol,Gramunt Nina,Navarro Arcadi,Minguillón Carolina,Fauria Karine,Suridjan Ivonne,Kollmorgen Gwendlyn,Bayfield Anna,Blennow KajORCID,Zetterberg HenrikORCID,Molinuevo José Luis,Suárez-Calvet Marc,Gispert Juan DomingoORCID,Arenaza-Urquijo Eider M.,

Abstract

Background and ObjectivesIncreased anxious-depressive symptomatology is observed in the preclinical stage of Alzheimer disease (AD), which may accelerate disease progression. We investigated whether β-amyloid, cortical thickness in medial temporal lobe structures, neuroinflammation, and sociodemographic factors were associated with greater anxious-depressive symptoms during the COVID-19 confinement.MethodsThis retrospective observational study included cognitively unimpaired older adults from the Alzheimer's and Families cohort, the majority with a family history of sporadic AD. Participants performed the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) during the COVID-19 confinement. A subset had available retrospective (on average: 2.4 years before) HADS assessment, amyloid [18F] flutemetamol PET and structural MRI scans, and CSF markers of neuroinflammation (interleukin-6 [IL-6], triggering receptor expressed on myeloid cells 2, and glial fibrillary acidic protein levels). We performed multivariable linear regression models to investigate the associations of prepandemic AD-related biomarkers and sociodemographic factors with HADS scores during the confinement. We further performed an analysis of covariance to adjust by participants' prepandemic anxiety-depression levels. Finally, we explored the role of stress and lifestyle changes (sleep patterns, eating, drinking, smoking habits, and medication use) on the tested associations and performed sex-stratified analyses.ResultsWe included 921 (254 with AD biomarkers) participants. β-amyloid positivity (B = 3.73; 95% CI = 1.1 to 6.36; p = 0.006), caregiving (B = 1.37; 95% CI 0.24–2.5; p = 0.018), sex (women: B = 1.95; 95% CI 1.1–2.79; p < 0.001), younger age (B = −0.12; 95% CI −0.18 to −0.052; p < 0.001), and lower education (B = −0.16; 95% CI −0.28 to −0.042; p = 0.008) were associated with greater anxious-depressive symptoms during the confinement. Considering prepandemic anxiety-depression levels, we further observed an association between lower levels of CSF IL-6 (B = −5.11; 95% CI −10.1 to −0.13; p = 0.044) and greater HADS scores. The results were independent of stress-related variables and lifestyle changes. Stratified analysis revealed that the associations were mainly driven by women.DiscussionOur results link AD-related pathophysiology and neuroinflammation with greater anxious-depressive symptomatology during the COVID-19-related confinement, notably in women. AD pathophysiology may increase neuropsychiatric symptomatology in response to stressors. This association may imply a worse clinical prognosis in people at risk for AD after the pandemic and thus deserves to be considered by clinicians.Trial Registration InformationClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT02485730.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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