4.5 Article

Association of Apolipoprotein E-e4 and Dementia Declines with Age

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY
Volume 22, Issue 10, Pages 957-960

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jagp.2014.03.008

Keywords

Successful cognitive aging; oldest-old; dementia risk factors

Funding

  1. NIH Fogarty International Center & National Institute on Aging grant [R21TW009258]
  2. Universidad de Costa Rica
  3. Alzheimer's Association

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Objective: To study the association of dementia with apolipoprotein E-e4 (APOE-e4) and its interaction with age in a nonagenarian Costa Rican group (N-sample) and a general elderly contrast group (GE-sample). Methods: In both case-control studies, participants were cognitively intact or diagnosed with dementia. The N-sample (N = 112) was at least age 90 years; the GE-sample (N = 98) was at least age 65 years. Results: Dementia and APOE-e4 were not significantly associated in the N-sample, but were in the GE-sample. There was a significant interaction of age with APOE-e4 in the N-sample, but not in the GE-sample. Descriptively dividing the N-sample at the median (age 93 years) showed a group interaction: APOE-e4 was more associated with dementia in the younger N-sample than in the older N-sample, where six of seven APOE-e4 carriers were cognitively intact. Conclusions: The results support the reduction in association of APOE-e4 with dementia in extreme old age, consistent with a survivor effect model for successful cognitive aging.

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