Association of biological sex with clinical outcomes and biomarkers of Alzheimer's disease in adults with Down syndrome

M. Florencia Iulita, Alexandre Bejanin, Eduard Vilaplana, María Carmona Iragui, Bessy Benejam, Laura Videla Toro, Isabel Barroeta, Susana Fernández, Miren Altuna-Azkargorta, Jordi Pegueroles, Victor Montal, Silvia Valldeneu, Sandra Giménez, Sofía González-Ortiz, Soraya Torres Alcalá, Shaimaa El Bounasri El Bennadi, Concepción Padilla, Mateus Aranha, Teresa Estellés, Ignacio Illán-GalaOlivia Belbin, Natalia Valle-Tamayo, Valle Camacho, Esther Blessing, Ricardo S Osorio, Sebastián Videla, Sylvain Lehmann, Anthony J. Holland, Henrik Zetterberg, Kaj Blennow, Daniel Alcolea, Jordi Clarimón, Shahid Zaman, Rafael Blesa, Alberto Lleo Bisa, Juan Fortea Ormaechea

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Resum

The study of sex differences in Alzheimer's disease is increasingly recognized as a key priority in research and clinical development. People with Down syndrome represent the largest population with a genetic link to Alzheimer's disease (>90% in the 7th decade). Yet, sex differences in Alzheimer's disease manifestations have not been fully investigated in these individuals, who are key candidates for preventive clinical trials. In this double-centre, cross-sectional study of 628 adults with Down syndrome [46% female, 44.4 (34.6; 50.7) years], we compared Alzheimer's disease prevalence, as well as cognitive outcomes and AT(N) biomarkers across age and sex. Participants were recruited from a population-based health plan in Barcelona, Spain, and from a convenience sample recruited via services for people with intellectual disabilities in England and Scotland. They underwent assessment with the Cambridge Cognitive Examination for Older Adults with Down Syndrome, modified cued recall test and determinations of brain amyloidosis (CSF amyloid-β 42 / 40 and amyloid-PET), tau pathology (CSF and plasma phosphorylated-tau181) and neurodegeneration biomarkers (CSF and plasma neurofilament light, total-tau, fluorodeoxyglucose-PET and MRI). We used within-group locally estimated scatterplot smoothing models to compare the trajectory of biomarker changes with age in females versus males, as well as by apolipoprotein ɛ4 carriership. Our work revealed similar prevalence, age at diagnosis and Cambridge Cognitive Examination for Older Adults with Down Syndrome scores by sex, but males showed lower modified cued recall test scores from age 45 compared with females. AT(N) biomarkers were comparable in males and females. When considering apolipoprotein ɛ4, female ɛ4 carriers showed a 3-year earlier age at diagnosis compared with female non-carriers (50.5 versus 53.2 years, P = 0.01). This difference was not seen in males (52.2 versus 52.5 years, P = 0.76). Our exploratory analyses considering sex, apolipoprotein ɛ4 and biomarkers showed that female ɛ4 carriers tended to exhibit lower CSF amyloid-β 42/amyloid-β 40 ratios and lower hippocampal volume compared with females without this allele, in line with the clinical difference. This work showed that biological sex did not influence clinical and biomarker profiles of Alzheimer's disease in adults with Down syndrome. Consideration of apolipoprotein ɛ4 haplotype, particularly in females, may be important for clinical research and clinical trials that consider this population. Accounting for, reporting and publishing sex-stratified data, even when no sex differences are found, is central to helping advance precision medicine. Iulita et al. report that sex does not modify Alzheimer's disease clinical outcomes and biomarker profiles in adults with Down syndrome, except for the association between sex and APOE ɛ4 on age at diagnosis. Accounting for and reporting sex-stratified data, even when no significant differences are found, is central to developing precision medicine.
Idioma originalAnglès
Número d’articlefcad074
Nombre de pàgines16
RevistaBrain Communications
Volum5
Número2
DOIs
Estat de la publicacióPublicada - 2023

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