4.2 Article

The Contribution of Cerebral Vascular Neuropathology to Mild Stage of Alzheimer's Dementia Using the NACC Database

Journal

CURRENT ALZHEIMER RESEARCH
Volume 17, Issue 13, Pages 1167-1176

Publisher

BENTHAM SCIENCE PUBL LTD
DOI: 10.2174/1567205018666210212160902

Keywords

Cerebrovascular pathology; Alzheimer's disease; Alzheimer's dementia; Cognition; neurodegenerative disorder; amyloid plaques

Funding

  1. NIA/NIH [U01 AG016976]
  2. NIA [P30 AG019610, P30 AG013846, P30 AG062428-01, P50 AG008702, P50 AG025688, P50 AG047266, P30 AG010133, P50 AG005146, P30 AG062421-01, P30 AG062422-01, P50 AG005138, P30 AG008051, P30 AG013854, P30 AG008017, P30 AG010161, P50 AG047366, P30 AG010129, P50 AG016573]
  3. The NIA [P30 AG062429-01, P50 AG023501, P30 AG035982, P30 AG028383, P30 AG053760, P30 AG010124, P50 AG005133, P50 AG005142, P30 AG012300, P30 AG049638, P50 AG005136, P30 AG062715-01, P50 AG005681, P50 AG047270]

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Background: The interaction between cerebral vessel disease (CVD) pathology and Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology in the development of dementia is controversial. We examined the association of cerebral vascular neuropathology and cerebrovascular risk factors with the mild stage of Alzheimer's dementia and cognitive function. Methods: This cross-sectional study included men and women aged 60 years or over who had yearly clinical assessments and had agreed to brain autopsy at the time of death, and who contributed to data stored at the National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center (NACC) in the USA. Cognitively normal and impaired subjects with presumptive aetiology of AD, including mild cognitive impairment (ADMCI) and dementia (Alzheimer's dementia), and with complete neuropathological data, were included in our analyses. We used neuropsychological data proximate to death to create summary measures of global cognition and cognitive domains. Systematic neuropathological assessments documenting the severity of cerebral vascular pathology were included. Logistic and linear regression analyses corrected for age at death, sex and Lewy body pathology were used to examine associations of vessel disease with the severity of Alzheimer's disease dementia, and cognitive function, respectively. Results: No significant relationship was observed between late-life risk factors and Alzheimer's dementia. The severity of arteriosclerosis and presence of global infarcts/lacunes were related to mild Alzheimer's dementia (B=0.423, p<0.001; B=0.366, p=0.026), and the effects were significant after adjusting for neuritic plaques and neurofibrillary tangles (B=0.385, p<0.001; B=0.63, p=0.001). When vascular brain injuries were subdivided into old and acute/subacute types, we found that old microinfarcts and old microbleeds were associated with mild Alzheimer's dementia (B=0.754, p=0.007; B=2.331, p=0.032). The old microinfarcts remained significantly associated with mild Alzheimer's dementia after correcting AD pathologies (B=1.31, p<0.001). In addition, the number of microinfarcts in the cerebral cortex had a significant relation with mild Alzheimer's dementia, whether or not the data were corrected for AD pathologies (B=0.616, p=0.016; B=0.884, p=0.005). Atherosclerosis, arteriosclerosis and white matter rarefaction were found to be significantly associated with faster progression of Alzheimer's dementia (B=0.068, p=0.001; B=0.046, p=0.016, B=0.081, p=0.037), but white matter rarefaction no longer had a significant effect after adjusting for AD pathologies. We also found that the severity of atherosclerosis was related to impairment in processing speed (beta=-0.112, p=0.006) and executive function (beta=-0.092, p=0.023). Arteriosclerosis was significantly associated with language (beta=-0.103, p=0.011) and global cognition (beta=-0.098, p=0.016) deficits. Conclusion: Our study found the significant relation of global, old, acute/subacute and regional cerebral vascular pathologies, but not white matter rarefaction, to the onset and severity of Alzheimer's dementia. We also showed that late-life risk factors were found to have no relation with Alzheimer's dementia, and the increased risk of dementia with APOE epsilon 4 is not mediated by CVD. The best interpretation of these findings is that CVD has a potential additive effect with AD pathologies in the development and progression of what is clinically diagnosed as Alzheimer's dementia.

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