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Association of apolipoprotein E variation with...
Journal article

Association of apolipoprotein E variation with cognitive impairment across multiple neurodegenerative diagnoses

Abstract

For many years there has been uncertainty regarding how apolipoprotein E (APOE) E2 and E4 variants may influence overlapping features of neurodegeneration, such as cognitive impairment. We aimed to identify whether the APOE variants are associated with cognitive function across various neurodegenerative and cerebrovascular diagnoses (n = 513). Utilizing a comprehensive neuropsychology battery, multivariate multiple regression was used to assess the influence of APOE carrier status and disease cohort on performance across five cognitive domains. Irrespective of disease cohort, E4 carriers had significantly lower performance in verbal memory and visuospatial domains than those with E3/3, while E2 carriers' cognitive performance was not significantly different. However, E2 carriers with frontotemporal dementia (FTD) performed significantly worse than those with E3/3 in the attention/working memory, executive function, and visuospatial domains. Our results highlight that the influence of APOE variation on cognition is complex, in some cases varying based on diagnosis and possibly underlying disease pathology.

Authors

Dilliott AA; Sunderland KM; McLaughlin PM; Roberts AC; Evans EC; Abrahao A; Binns MA; Black SE; Borrie M; Casaubon LK

Journal

Neurobiology of Aging, Vol. 105, , pp. 378.e1–378.e9

Publisher

Elsevier

Publication Date

September 1, 2021

DOI

10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2021.04.011

ISSN

0197-4580

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