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At
least through their md-60s, people at fenetic risk
for Alzheimer’s age mentally just like non-carriers
Newswise — Australian researchers say that a
genotype that heightens the risk for Alzheimer’s
disease does not contribute to cognitive change
during most of adulthood. The largest study of its
kind has found that carriers and non-carriers show
the same type and extent of normal age-related
cognitive declines, decades before carriers start to
more often develop symptoms of dementia. The
findings suggest that the higher-risk genotype acts
only in later years to layer disease on top of
normal aging.
The findings appear in the January issue of
Neuropsychology, which is published by the
American Psychological Association (APA).
The study may help rule out the possibility of very
early Alzheimer's as the cause of the declines among
carriers before they reach old age. Write the
authors, “[Alzheimer's disease] processes may occur
later in the lifespan and add to normal cognitive
aging to produce a dementia syndrome.”
The study confirmed that carriers of the APOE4 gene
type (allele), which confers higher risk for
Alzheimer's, are just like other people their age
throughout most of adult life in terms of core
mental functions. Previous findings had been
unclear. Lead author Anthony Jorm, PhD, DSc,
explains, “Although some areas of cognitive decline
begin from early adulthood onwards, this is not due
– as some have speculated -- to very early
Alzheimer's changes in the brain.”
The APOE gene helps to transport cholesterol through
the production of apolipoprotein E. People carry two
copies of APOE, each being one of four APOE alleles.
APOE4 raises Alzheimer's risk. In this study,
researchers at the University of Melbourne and
Australian National University assessed whether the
small percentage (varying by ethnicity) of the
population that carries at least one copy of APOE4
are cognitively different from non-carriers long
before anyone shows signs of dementia.
The authors studied 6,560 people living in Canberra
or neighboring Queanbeyan enrolled in the PATH
Through Life Project, a long-term study of aging
that assesses people in the age groups of 20-24,
40-44, and 60-64 years every four years for a period
of 20 years. Jorm and his colleagues evaluated
whether, in each age group, carriers of APOE4 (27
percent in their sample) were significantly
different from non-carriers on tests of functions
affected by Alzheimer's: episodic memory, working
memory, mental speed, reaction time, and reading
vocabulary.
Performance on all tests (except for reading
vocabulary, which tends to hold up with age)
declined across age groups, a sign of normal
cognitive aging. However, APOE4 did not affect
performance at any age. Thus the researchers
conclude that at least between ages 20 and 64,
people with APOE4 age normally in those central
cognitive functions.
This finding suggests that APOE4 heightens the risk
for Alzheimer's in old age through an additional,
as-yet-unknown process that accelerates or
intensifies normal changes, pushing them into the
range of disease. Jorm provides an analogy. “In
general, hair becomes thinner with age,” he says.
“However, there are some people who have an
additional hereditary factor that makes them bald at
an early age.”
Article: “APOE Genotype and Cognitive Functioning in
a Large Age-Stratified Population Sample;” Anthony
F. Jorm, PhD, DSc, University of Melbourne and
Australian National University, and Karen A. Mather,
PhD, Peter Butterworth, PhD, Kaarin J. Ansley, PhD,
Helen Christensen, PhD, and Simon Easteal, PhD,
Australian National University; Neuropsychology,
Vol 21. No. 1.
The American Psychological Association (APA), in
Washington, DC, is the largest scientific and
professional organization representing psychology in
the United States and is the world’s largest
association of psychologists. APA’s membership
includes more than 150,000 researchers, educators,
clinicians, consultants and students. Through its
divisions in 54 subfields of psychology and
affiliations with 60 state, territorial and Canadian
provincial associations, APA works to advance
psychology as a science, as a profession and as a
means of promoting human welfare.