• Arch Neurol Chicago · Sep 2007

    Cognitive domain decline in healthy apolipoprotein E epsilon4 homozygotes before the diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment.

    • Richard J Caselli, Eric M Reiman, Dona E C Locke, Michael L Hutton, Joseph G Hentz, Charlene Hoffman-Snyder, Bryan K Woodruff, Gene E Alexander, and David Osborne.
    • Department of Neurology, Mayo Clinic, 13400 E Shea Blvd, Scottsdale, AZ 85259, USA. caselli.richard@mayo.edu
    • Arch Neurol Chicago. 2007 Sep 1;64(9):1306-11.

    BackgroundMemory declines more rapidly with age in apolipoprotein E (APOE) epsilon4 carriers than in APOE epsilon4 noncarriers, and APOE epsilon4 homozygotes' cognitive performances correlate with stressors. These changes could represent presymptomatic disease in some, despite their youth.ObjectiveTo show that presymptomatic APOE epsilon4 homozygotes experience greater psychometric decline at a younger age than APOE epsilon4 heterozygotes and noncarriers before the diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer disease (AD).DesignProspective observational studySettingAcademic medical center.ParticipantsA total of 43 APOE epsilon4 homozygotes, 59 APOE epsilon4 heterozygotes, and 112 APOE epsilon4 noncarriers aged 50 to 69 years were cognitively healthy and matched at entry according to age, educational level, and sex.InterventionNeuropsychological battery given every 2 years.Main Outcome MeasuresPredefined test and cognitive domain decline criteria applied to consecutive epochs.ResultsOf 214 participants, 48 showed no decline on any test, 126 showed decline on only 1 test in 1 or more domains, and 40 showed decline on 2 or more tests in 1 or more domains. Cognitive domain decline occurred in 4 of 10 APOE epsilon4 homozygotes 60 years and older at entry (40.0%) compared with 5 of 66 APOE epsilon4 heterozygotes and noncarriers (7.6%) (P = .02) and was more predictive of subsequent decline than nondomain decline (17 of 24 [70.8%] vs 29 of 70 [41.4%]; P = .01). Decline on any memory test was predictive of further decline (P < .001), as was memory domain decline (P = .006) in all genetic subgroups. Seven participants developed MCI (in 6) or AD (in 1), of whom 5 were APOE epsilon4 homozygotes (P = .008). Retrospective comparison showed that those who experienced multidomain, memory, and language domain decline had lower spatial and memory scores at entry than those who experienced no decline.ConclusionsAPOE epsilon4 homozygotes in their 60s have higher rates of cognitive domain decline than APOE epsilon4 heterozygotes or noncarriers before the diagnosis of MCI and AD, thus confirming and characterizing the existence of a pre-MCI state in this genetic subset.

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