Sex in Alzheimer disease

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R03 · $161,000 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

PROJECT SUMMARY With the aging of the US population and high costs associated with caring for the cognitively impaired elderly, identifying older individuals at greatest risk for developing Alzheimer's disease (AD) is of utmost societal and clinical importance. Currently no treatments effectively slow the progression of AD or other causes of cognitive decline, but billions of dollars are being invested to develop effective treatments. Development of inexpensive, genomic methods that go beyond APOE to identify individuals at risk for cognitive decline has the potential to greatly accelerate the development of new treatments. The overall significance of this project is that it will use a validated polygenic score to more comprehensively understand when older men and women are at highest risk for cognitive decline and Alzheimer's neurodegeneration. Using an age-dependent approach, we have recently developed and validated a novel `polygenic hazard score' (PHS) for quantifying AD dementia age of onset, even among APOE E3/3 individuals, who constitute the majority of all US individuals with AD dementia. In this proposal, our objective is to comprehensively assess whether sex differences influence how PHS predicts cognitive decline and AD neurodegeneration and how age influences this relationship. Leveraging genotypic and multi-modal phenotypic data from several existing NIH-funded cohorts (total n > 7,000), we will investigate whether age-dependent sex differences modify cognitive decline, postmortem and in vivo AD neuropathology and medial temporal lobe volume loss.

Key facts

NIH application ID
9896747
Project number
5R03AG063260-02
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA, SAN FRANCISCO
Principal Investigator
Jennifer S Yokoyama
Activity code
R03
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2020
Award amount
$161,000
Award type
5
Project period
2019-04-01 → 2020-12-31