Abstract
Objective:To determine the effect of Aβ level on progression risk to MCI or dementia and longitudinal cognitive change in cognitively normal (CN) older individuals.Methods:All CN from the Australian Imaging Biomarkers and Lifestyle study (AIBL) with Aβ PET and ≥3 years follow-up were included (n=534; age 72±6 yrs; 27% Aβ positive; follow-up 5.3±1.7 yrs). Aβ level was divided using the standardised 0-100 Centiloid scale: <15 CL negative, 15-25 CL uncertain, 26-50 CL moderate, 51-100 CL high, >100 CL very high, noting >25 CL approximates a positive scan. Cox proportional hazards analysis and linear mixed effect models were used to assess risk of progression and cognitive decline.Results:Aβ levels in 63% were negative, 10% uncertain, 10% moderate, 14% high and 3% very high. Fifty-seven (11%) progressed to MCI or dementia. Compared to negative Aβ, the hazard ratio for progression for moderate Aβ was 3.2 (95% CI 1.3-7.6; p<0.05), for high was 7.0 (95% CI 3.7-13.3; p<0.001) and for very high was 11.4 (95% CI 5.1-25.8; p<0.001). Decline in cognitive composite score was minimal in the moderate group (-0.02 SD/year, p=0.05) while the high and very high declined substantially (high -0.08 SD/year, p<0.001; very high -0.35 SD/year p<0.001).Conclusion:The risk of MCI or dementia over 5 years in older CN is related to Aβ level on PET, 5% if negative vs 25% if positive but ranging from 12% if 26-50 CL to 28% if 51-100 CL and 50% if >100 CL. This information may be useful for dementia risk counselling and aid design of preclinical AD trials.
Publisher
Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)
Cited by
41 articles.
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