4.7 Article

Sex differences in Alzheimer risk Brain imaging of endocrine vs chronologic aging

Journal

NEUROLOGY
Volume 89, Issue 13, Pages 1382-1390

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000004425

Keywords

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Funding

  1. NIH/NIA [AG035137, AG13616, 2P01AG026572]
  2. Department of Neurology at Weill Cornell Medical College
  3. Alzheimer's Prevention Clinic, Weill Cornell Memory Disorders Program

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Objective: This observational multimodality brain imaging study investigates emergence of endophenotypes of late-onset Alzheimer disease (AD) risk during endocrine transition states in a cohort of clinically and cognitively normal women and age-matched men. Methods: Forty-two 40- to 60-year-old cognitively normalwomen (15 asymptomatic perimenopausal by age [CNT], 13 perimenopausal [PERI], and 14 postmenopausal [MENO]) and 18 age-and education-matched men were examined. All patients had volumetric MRI, F-18-fluoro-2-deoxyglucose (FDG)-PET (glucose metabolism), and Pittsburgh compound B-PET scans (beta-amyloid [A beta] deposition, a hallmark of AD pathology). Results: As expected, the MENO group was older than the PERI and CNT groups. Otherwise, groups were comparable on clinical and neuropsychological measures and APOE4 distribution. Compared to CNT women and to men, and controlling for age, PERI and MENO groups exhibited increased indicators of AD endophenotype, including hypometabolism, increased A beta deposition, and reduced gray and white matter volumes in AD-vulnerable regions (p< 0.001). AD biomarker abnormalities were greatest in MENO, intermediate in PERI, and lowest in CNT women (p< 0.001). A beta deposition was exacerbated in APOE4-positive MENO women relative to the other groups (p< 0.001). Conclusions: Multimodality brain imaging indicates sex differences in development of the AD endophenotype, suggesting that the preclinical AD phase is early in the female aging process and coincides with the endocrine transition of perimenopause. These data indicate that the optimal window of opportunity for therapeutic intervention in women is early in the endocrine aging process.

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