White Matter Abnormalities and Cognition in Aging and Alzheimer Disease.

IF 20.4 1区 医学 Q1 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Christopher Peter, Aditi Sathe, Niranjana Shashikumar, Kimberly R Pechman, Abigail W Workmeister, T Bryan Jackson, Yuankai Huo, Shubhabrata Mukherjee, Jesse Mez, Logan C Dumitrescu, Katherine A Gifford, Corey J Bolton, Leslie S Gaynor, Shannon L Risacher, Lori L Beason-Held, Yang An, Konstantinos Arfanakis, Guray Erus, Christos Davatzikos, Duygu Tosun-Turgut, Mohamad Habes, Di Wang, Arthur W Toga, Paul M Thompson, Panpan Zhang, Kurt G Schilling, Marilyn Albert, Walter Kukull, Sarah A Biber, Bennett A Landman, Barbara B Bendlin, Sterling C Johnson, Julie Schneider, Lisa L Barnes, David A Bennett, Angela L Jefferson, Susan M Resnick, Andrew J Saykin, Paul K Crane, Michael L Cuccaro, Timothy J Hohman, Derek B Archer, Dimitrios Zaras, Yisu Yang, Alaina Durant, Praitayini Kanakaraj, Michael E Kim, Chenyu Gao, Nancy R Newlin, Karthik Ramadass, Nazirah Mohd Khairi, Zhiyuan Li, Tianyuan Yao, Seo-Eun Choi, Brandon Klinedinst, Michael L Lee, Phoebe Scollard, Emily H Trittschuh, Elizabeth A Sanders
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Importance: There has yet to be a large-scale study quantifying the association between white matter microstructure and cognitive performance and decline in aging and Alzheimer disease (AD).

Objective: To investigate the associations between tract-specific white matter microstructure and cognitive performance and decline in aging and AD-related cognitive impairment.

Design, setting, and participants: This prognostic study of aging and AD, a secondary data analysis of multisite cohort studies, acquired data from 9 cohorts between September 2002 and November 2022. Participants were eligible if they had diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (dMRI) data, domain-specific cognitive composite z scores, demographic and clinical data, were aged 50 years or older, and passed neuroimaging quality control. Demographic and clinical covariates included age, sex, education, race and ethnicity, APOE haplotype status (ε2, ε3, ε4), and clinical status. The present study was conducted from June 2024 to February 2025.

Exposures: White matter microstructure and cognitive performance and decline.

Main outcomes and measures: Clinical diagnosis, imaging measures (dMRI, T1-weighted MRI, and amyloid and tau positron emission tomography), and cognitive tests.

Results: Of 4467 participants who underwent 9208 longitudinal cognitive sessions, 2698 (60.4%) were female, and the mean age (SD) was 74.3 (9.2) years; 3213 were cognitively unimpaired, 972 had mild cognitive impairment, and 282 had AD dementia. White matter free water (FW) showed the strongest associations with cross-sectional cognitive performance and longitudinal cognitive decline across all domains, particularly memory. FW in limbic tracts, such as the cingulum, presented the strongest associations with both memory performance (cingulum: β = -0.718; P < .001; fornix: β = -1.069; P < .001) and decline (cingulum: β = -0.115; P < .001; fornix: β = -0.153; P < .001). White matter FW measures interacted with baseline diagnosis, gray matter atrophy, APOE ε4 status, and amyloid positivity to predict poorer cognitive performance and accelerated cognitive decline. Noteworthy interactions include fornix FW and hippocampal volume (β = 10.598; P < .001), cingulum FW and SPARE-AD index (β = -0.532; P < .001), and inferior temporal gyrus transcallosal tract FW and baseline diagnosis (β = -0.537; P < .001), all predicting poorer memory performance.

Conclusions and relevance: White matter microstructural changes, particularly FW, play a critical role in cognitive decline in aging and AD-related cognitive impairment. These findings highlight the importance of FW correction in dMRI studies and highlight the limbic system, especially the cingulum and fornix, as key regions associated with cognitive decline; the interaction models highlight that integrating FW-corrected metrics with other AD biomarkers may further elucidate the biological mechanisms of neurodegeneration in aging.

衰老和阿尔茨海默病中的白质异常与认知。
重要性:目前还没有大规模的研究量化白质微观结构与认知能力、衰老和阿尔茨海默病(AD)衰退之间的关系。目的:探讨神经束特异性白质微观结构与老年认知能力下降及ad相关认知功能障碍的关系。设计、环境和参与者:这项关于衰老和阿尔茨海默病的预后研究是一项多地点队列研究的二次数据分析,数据来自2002年9月至2022年11月期间的9个队列。如果参与者具有弥散加权磁共振成像(dMRI)数据,特定领域认知复合z分数,人口统计学和临床数据,年龄在50岁或以上,并且通过神经成像质量控制,则他们符合条件。人口学和临床协变量包括年龄、性别、教育程度、种族和民族、APOE单倍型状态(ε2、ε3、ε4)和临床状态。本研究从2024年6月到2025年2月进行。暴露:白质微观结构与认知表现和衰退。主要结果和指标:临床诊断、影像学指标(dMRI、t1加权MRI、淀粉样蛋白和tau正电子发射断层扫描)和认知测试。结果:在接受9208次纵向认知训练的4467名参与者中,2698名(60.4%)为女性,平均年龄(SD)为74.3岁(9.2岁);3213人认知功能未受损,972人有轻度认知障碍,282人患有阿尔茨海默氏症痴呆。白质游离水(FW)与横断面认知表现和纵向认知衰退的关联最强,在所有领域,尤其是记忆。大脑边缘束(如扣带)的FW与两种记忆表现的相关性最强(扣带:β = -0.718;结论及意义:白质微结构变化,尤其是FW,在老年认知能力下降和ad相关认知障碍中起关键作用。这些发现强调了dMRI研究中FW校正的重要性,并强调了边缘系统,特别是扣带和穹窿,是与认知能力下降相关的关键区域;这些相互作用模型强调,将fw校正的指标与其他AD生物标志物结合起来,可能会进一步阐明衰老过程中神经退行性变的生物学机制。
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来源期刊
JAMA neurology
JAMA neurology CLINICAL NEUROLOGY-
CiteScore
41.90
自引率
1.70%
发文量
250
期刊介绍: JAMA Neurology is an international peer-reviewed journal for physicians caring for people with neurologic disorders and those interested in the structure and function of the normal and diseased nervous system. The Archives of Neurology & Psychiatry began publication in 1919 and, in 1959, became 2 separate journals: Archives of Neurology and Archives of General Psychiatry. In 2013, their names changed to JAMA Neurology and JAMA Psychiatry, respectively. JAMA Neurology is a member of the JAMA Network, a consortium of peer-reviewed, general medical and specialty publications.
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