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Sex Differences in Alzheimer Disease Risk
JAMA Neurology; ePub 2019 Feb 4; Buckley, et al
Early tau deposition was elevated in women compared with men in individuals on the Alzheimer disease (AD) trajectory, a recent study found. These findings lend support to a growing body of literature that highlights a biological underpinning for sex differences in AD risk. Researchers conducted a study of 2 cross-sectional, convenience-sampled cohorts of clinically normal individuals who received tau and β-amyloid (Aβ) PET scans. Data were collected between January 2016 and February 2018 from 193 clinically normal individuals from the Harvard Aging Brain Study who underwent carbon 11–labeled Pittsburgh Compound B and flortaucipir F18 PET and 103 clinically normal individuals from the Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative who underwent florbetapir and flortaucipir F 18 PET. They found:
- The mean (SD) age of all individuals was 74.2 (7.6) years (81 APOE ε4 carriers [31%]; 89 individuals [30%] with high Aβ).
- There was no clear association of sex with regional tau that was replicated across studies.
- However, in both cohorts, clinically normal women exhibited higher entorhinal cortical tau than men, which was associated with individuals with higher Aβ burden.
- A sex by APOE ε4 interaction was not associated with regional tau.
Buckley RF, Mormino EC, Rabin JS, et al. Sex differences in the association of global amyloid and regional tau deposition measured by positron emission tomography in clinically normal older adults. [Published online ahead of print February 4, 2019]. JAMA Neurology. doi:10.1001/jamaneurol.2018.4693.