Frailty effects on non-demented cognitive trajectories are moderated by sex and Alzheimer’s genetic risk

Abstract Background Age-related frailty reflects cumulative multisystem physiological and health decline. Frailty increases the risk of adverse brain and cognitive outcomes, including differential decline and dementia. In a longitudinal sample of non-demented older adults, we examine whether (a) the...

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Main Authors: Sherilyn Thibeau, Kirstie McDermott, G. Peggy McFall, Kenneth Rockwood, Roger A. Dixon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-06-01
Series:Alzheimer’s Research & Therapy
Subjects:
Sex
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13195-019-0509-9
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spelling doaj-3be9b5480919490ead0dd6723f83ae9d2020-11-25T03:54:41ZengBMCAlzheimer’s Research & Therapy1758-91932019-06-0111111510.1186/s13195-019-0509-9Frailty effects on non-demented cognitive trajectories are moderated by sex and Alzheimer’s genetic riskSherilyn Thibeau0Kirstie McDermott1G. Peggy McFall2Kenneth Rockwood3Roger A. Dixon4Department of Psychology, University of AlbertaNeuroscience and Mental Health Institute, University of AlbertaDepartment of Psychology, University of AlbertaDepartment of Geriatric Medicine, QEII Health Sciences Centre, Dalhousie UniversityDepartment of Psychology, University of AlbertaAbstract Background Age-related frailty reflects cumulative multisystem physiological and health decline. Frailty increases the risk of adverse brain and cognitive outcomes, including differential decline and dementia. In a longitudinal sample of non-demented older adults, we examine whether (a) the level and/or change in frailty predicts trajectories across three cognitive domains (memory, speed, and executive function (EF)) and (b) prediction patterns are modified by sex or Alzheimer’s genetic risk (Apolipoprotein E (APOE)). Methods Participants (n = 632; M age = 70.7, range 53–95; 3 waves) were from the Victoria Longitudinal Study. After computing a frailty index, we used latent growth modeling and path analysis to test the frailty effects on level and change in three latent variables of cognition. We tested two potential moderators by stratifying by sex and APOE risk (ε4+, ε4-). Results First, frailty levels predicted speed and EF performance (level) and differential memory change slopes. Second, change in frailty predicted the rate of decline for both speed and EF. Third, sex moderation analyses showed that females were selectively sensitive to (a) frailty effects on memory change and (b) frailty change effects on speed change. In contrast, the frailty effects on EF change were stronger in males. Fourth, genetic moderation analyses showed that APOE risk (e4+) carriers were selectively sensitive to frailty effects on memory change. Conclusion In non-demented older adults, increasing frailty is strongly associated with the differential decline in cognitive trajectories. For example, higher (worse) frailty was associated with more rapid memory decline than was lower (better) frailty. These effects, however, are moderated by both genetic risk and sex.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13195-019-0509-9FrailtyExecutive functionEpisodic memorySpeedSexApolipoprotein E
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sherilyn Thibeau
Kirstie McDermott
G. Peggy McFall
Kenneth Rockwood
Roger A. Dixon
spellingShingle Sherilyn Thibeau
Kirstie McDermott
G. Peggy McFall
Kenneth Rockwood
Roger A. Dixon
Frailty effects on non-demented cognitive trajectories are moderated by sex and Alzheimer’s genetic risk
Alzheimer’s Research & Therapy
Frailty
Executive function
Episodic memory
Speed
Sex
Apolipoprotein E
author_facet Sherilyn Thibeau
Kirstie McDermott
G. Peggy McFall
Kenneth Rockwood
Roger A. Dixon
author_sort Sherilyn Thibeau
title Frailty effects on non-demented cognitive trajectories are moderated by sex and Alzheimer’s genetic risk
title_short Frailty effects on non-demented cognitive trajectories are moderated by sex and Alzheimer’s genetic risk
title_full Frailty effects on non-demented cognitive trajectories are moderated by sex and Alzheimer’s genetic risk
title_fullStr Frailty effects on non-demented cognitive trajectories are moderated by sex and Alzheimer’s genetic risk
title_full_unstemmed Frailty effects on non-demented cognitive trajectories are moderated by sex and Alzheimer’s genetic risk
title_sort frailty effects on non-demented cognitive trajectories are moderated by sex and alzheimer’s genetic risk
publisher BMC
series Alzheimer’s Research & Therapy
issn 1758-9193
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Abstract Background Age-related frailty reflects cumulative multisystem physiological and health decline. Frailty increases the risk of adverse brain and cognitive outcomes, including differential decline and dementia. In a longitudinal sample of non-demented older adults, we examine whether (a) the level and/or change in frailty predicts trajectories across three cognitive domains (memory, speed, and executive function (EF)) and (b) prediction patterns are modified by sex or Alzheimer’s genetic risk (Apolipoprotein E (APOE)). Methods Participants (n = 632; M age = 70.7, range 53–95; 3 waves) were from the Victoria Longitudinal Study. After computing a frailty index, we used latent growth modeling and path analysis to test the frailty effects on level and change in three latent variables of cognition. We tested two potential moderators by stratifying by sex and APOE risk (ε4+, ε4-). Results First, frailty levels predicted speed and EF performance (level) and differential memory change slopes. Second, change in frailty predicted the rate of decline for both speed and EF. Third, sex moderation analyses showed that females were selectively sensitive to (a) frailty effects on memory change and (b) frailty change effects on speed change. In contrast, the frailty effects on EF change were stronger in males. Fourth, genetic moderation analyses showed that APOE risk (e4+) carriers were selectively sensitive to frailty effects on memory change. Conclusion In non-demented older adults, increasing frailty is strongly associated with the differential decline in cognitive trajectories. For example, higher (worse) frailty was associated with more rapid memory decline than was lower (better) frailty. These effects, however, are moderated by both genetic risk and sex.
topic Frailty
Executive function
Episodic memory
Speed
Sex
Apolipoprotein E
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s13195-019-0509-9
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