Harnessing cognitive trajectory clusterings to examine subclinical decline risk factors

Author:

Du Lianlian123ORCID,Hermann Bruce P14ORCID,Jonaitis Erin M123,Cody Karly Alex123ORCID,Rivera-Rivera Leonardo25ORCID,Rowley Howard6,Field Aaron6,Eisenmenger Laura6,Christian Bradley T257,Betthauser Tobey J123ORCID,Larget Bret8,Chappell Rick29,Janelidze Shorena10,Hansson Oskar10ORCID,Johnson Sterling C123,Langhough Rebecca123ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Wisconsin Alzheimer’s Institute, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health , Madison, WI 53792 , USA

2. Wisconsin Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center , University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health, Madison, WI 53792 , USA

3. Department of Medicine, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health , Madison, WI 53792 , USA

4. Department of Neurology, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health , Madison, WI 53705 , USA

5. Department of Medical Physics, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health , Madison, WI 53705 , USA

6. Department of Radiology, University of Wisconsin-Madison School of Medicine and Public Health , Madison, WI 53792 , USA

7. Waisman Laboratory for Brain Imaging and Behavior, University of Wisconsin-Madison , Madison, WI 53705 , USA

8. Department of Statistics, University of Wisconsin-Madison , Madison, WI 53706 , USA

9. Department of Biostatistics and Medical Informatics, School of Medicine and Public Health, University of Wisconsin-Madison , Madison, WI 53726 , USA

10. Clinical Memory Research Unit, Lund University , Lund 205 02 , Sweden

Abstract

Abstract Cognitive decline in Alzheimer’s disease and other dementias typically begins long before clinical impairment. Identifying people experiencing subclinical decline may facilitate earlier intervention. This study developed cognitive trajectory clusters using longitudinally based random slope and change point parameter estimates from a Preclinical Alzheimer’s disease Cognitive Composite and examined how baseline and most recently available clinical/health-related characteristics, cognitive statuses and biomarkers for Alzheimer’s disease and vascular disease varied across these cognitive clusters. Data were drawn from the Wisconsin Registry for Alzheimer’s Prevention, a longitudinal cohort study of adults from late midlife, enriched for a parental history of Alzheimer’s disease and without dementia at baseline. Participants who were cognitively unimpaired at the baseline visit with ≥3 cognitive visits were included in trajectory modelling (n = 1068). The following biomarker data were available for subsets: positron emission tomography amyloid (amyloid: n = 367; [11C]Pittsburgh compound B (PiB): global PiB distribution volume ratio); positron emission tomography tau (tau: n = 321; [18F]MK-6240: primary regions of interest meta-temporal composite); MRI neurodegeneration (neurodegeneration: n = 581; hippocampal volume and global brain atrophy); T2 fluid-attenuated inversion recovery MRI white matter ischaemic lesion volumes (vascular: white matter hyperintensities; n = 419); and plasma pTau217 (n = 165). Posterior median estimate person-level change points, slopes’ pre- and post-change point and estimated outcome (intercepts) at change point for cognitive composite were extracted from Bayesian Bent-Line Regression modelling and used to characterize cognitive trajectory groups (K-means clustering). A common method was used to identify amyloid/tau/neurodegeneration/vascular biomarker thresholds. We compared demographics, last visit cognitive status, health-related factors and amyloid/tau/neurodegeneration/vascular biomarkers across the cognitive groups using ANOVA, Kruskal–Wallis, χ2, and Fisher’s exact tests. Mean (standard deviation) baseline and last cognitive assessment ages were 58.4 (6.4) and 66.6 (6.6) years, respectively. Cluster analysis identified three cognitive trajectory groups representing steep, n = 77 (7.2%); intermediate, n = 446 (41.8%); and minimal, n = 545 (51.0%) cognitive decline. The steep decline group was older, had more females, APOE e4 carriers and mild cognitive impairment/dementia at last visit; it also showed worse self-reported general health-related and vascular risk factors and higher amyloid, tau, neurodegeneration and white matter hyperintensity positive proportions at last visit. Subtle cognitive decline was consistently evident in the steep decline group and was associated with generally worse health. In addition, cognitive trajectory groups differed on aetiology-informative biomarkers and risk factors, suggesting an intimate link between preclinical cognitive patterns and amyloid/tau/neurodegeneration/vascular biomarker differences in late middle-aged adults. The result explains some of the heterogeneity in cognitive performance within cognitively unimpaired late middle-aged adults.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Biological Psychiatry,Psychiatry and Mental health

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