Influence of biological sex on early cognitive performance in FTLD mutation carriers: an ALLFTD study

IF 13 1区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Jesús Garcia Castro, Sara Rubio‐Guerra, Judit Selma González, Molly B Memel, Oriol Dols‐Icardo, Alexandre Bejanin, Olivia Belbin, Juan Fortea, Daniel Alcolea, Maria Carmona‐Iragui, Isabel Barroeta, Miguel A Santos‐Santos, Mª Belen Sánchez‐Saudinós, Isabel Sala, Hilary W. Heuer, Adam M. Staffaroni, Kaitlin B. Casaletto, Brad F. Boeve, Adam L. Boxer, Howard J. Rosen, Alberto Lleo, Ignacio Illán‐Gala
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

BackgroundAccumulating evidence indicates that biological sex may influence clinical manifestation within the spectrum of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD), implying differences in cognitive reserve. Nonetheless, investigations into the impact of biological sex during the preclinical and minimally symptomatic stages of FTLD are lacking.MethodWe included 275 mutation carriers (158 females; 127 with C9orf72, 68 with GRN, and 80 with MAPT mutations) and 161 non‐carrier familial controls (97 females) from the ALLFTD Consortium (Staffaroni et al., Nat Medicine 2022). Participants underwent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI; 348 baseline, 338 longitudinal) and neuropsychological evaluations (394 baseline, 507 longitudinal). Behavioral symptoms were characterized with the Revised Self‐Monitoring Scale (RSMS) and the Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI severity scores). MRI‐derived regional volume estimates (RVE) were computed. Cognitive measures and RVE were normalized against sex‐matched controls. Cognitive composites (language, executive function, and visuospatial function) were calculated by averaging raw scores for each domain. Clinical characteristics and RVE comparisons were made between male and female participants. We adopted the residuals approach to explore behavioral and cognitive reserve by fitting a linear regression model for executive z‐scores as the response value and age, education, and RVE as explanatory variables.ResultIn mutation carriers, sex was not a significant differentiator in age, education level, disease severity, or mutation frequency. Most mutation carriers (188, 68%) were asymptomatic or mildly symptomatic at baseline. However, female mutation carriers exhibited significantly lower visuospatial performance at baseline (Cohen's d = ‐0.34, 95% CI[‐0.58, ‐0.09], p=.001). This difference remained significant among asymptomatic GRN mutation carriers (Cohen’s d = ‐0.73, 95% CI[‐1.22, ‐0.23], p=0.003) but not in other mutations. Following the residuals approach, female mutation carriers showed higher executive performance than males for the same amount of both frontotemporal and global atrophy as quantified by RVE (Cohen's d=0.45, 95 % CI[0.22, 0.67], p<.001). The observed higher executive reserve in women was particularly pronounced in C9orf72 carriers (Cohen's d=0.77, 95% CI[0.35, 1.20], p<.001) but not significant in GRN (p=0.48) and MAPT carriers (p=0.07). No differences in behavioral reserve reached statistical significance.ConclusionFemale sex might modulate early cognitive performance and confer higher executive reserve in FTLD mutation carriers.
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来源期刊
Alzheimer's & Dementia
Alzheimer's & Dementia 医学-临床神经学
CiteScore
14.50
自引率
5.00%
发文量
299
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Alzheimer's & Dementia is a peer-reviewed journal that aims to bridge knowledge gaps in dementia research by covering the entire spectrum, from basic science to clinical trials to social and behavioral investigations. It provides a platform for rapid communication of new findings and ideas, optimal translation of research into practical applications, increasing knowledge across diverse disciplines for early detection, diagnosis, and intervention, and identifying promising new research directions. In July 2008, Alzheimer's & Dementia was accepted for indexing by MEDLINE, recognizing its scientific merit and contribution to Alzheimer's research.
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