Association of Alzheimer’s Disease and Other Neuropathologies With Functional Disability in Persons With and Without Dementia

Author:

Farfel Jose M12,Capuano Ana W13,Buchman Aron S13ORCID,Schneider Julie A12,Bennett David A13ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Rush Alzheimer’s Disease Center, Rush University Medical Center , Chicago, Illinois , USA

2. Rush University Medical Center Department of Pathology, , Chicago, Illinois , USA

3. Rush Medical College Department of Neurological Sciences, , Chicago, Illinois , USA

Abstract

Abstract Background Dementia results from multiple neuropathologies causing cognitive impairment sufficiently severe to affect functional status. However, these pathologies and functional impairment are common in persons without dementia. We examined the association of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and multiple other neuropathologies with instrumental and basic activities of daily living in persons with and without dementia. Methods Participants were 1 509 deceased from the Religious Orders Study or Rush Memory and Aging Project. Pathologic AD and 3 other AD indices were examined, in addition to 4 non-AD neurodegenerative pathologies: cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA), hippocampal sclerosis, TDP-43, and Lewy bodies, and 4 cerebrovascular pathologies: gross- and microinfarctions, athero- and arteriolosclerosis. Functional assessment included Lawton and Katz Index Instrumental and Basic Activities of Daily Living (IADL and BADL). Ordinal regression models adjusted for age, sex, and education were used to examine the association of neuropathologies with IADL and BADL. Results Alzheimer’s disease and the other neuropathologies were associated with impaired IADL (all ps < .001) and with impaired BADL (ps < .01), except for atherosclerosis and CAA, which were not associated with BADL. The effects of most neuropathologies were largely affected by dementia. However, small effects on IADL remained for PHF-tau tangles after adjusting models for dementia. Direct effects of gross infarcts on IADL and BADL and of microinfarcts on BADL remained unchanged after adjusting the models for dementia. Conclusions Alzheimer’s disease and all other neuropathologies are strongly associated with functional disability. The association of most neuropathologies with disability was eliminated or attenuated by dementia, except for gross infarcts and microinfarcts.

Funder

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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