Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe apolipoprotein ε4 (APOE4) allele is the most common and well established risk factor for typical late‐onset amnestic Alzheimer’s dementia. Less is known about the role of APOE in patients with atypical clinical presentations of AD, with studies often disagreeing on APOE4 frequencies in these cohorts. We aimed to assess relationships between APOE genotype and age, amyloid‐beta (Aβ) deposition and clinical phenotype in Alzheimer’s disease.Method138 atypical AD patients (57 posterior cortical atrophy and 81 logopenic aphasia) were recruited by the Neurodegenerative Research Group at Mayo Clinic, and underwent APOE testing and Pittsburgh Compound B PET. 318 typical AD patients with APOE genotype and known onset age were identified from ADNI (121 had Aβ‐PET). Aβ‐PET was quantified using the centiloid scale. Logistic regression was used to estimate the proportion of APOE4 carriers by onset age and clinical group. Linear regression was used to estimate mean Aβ centiloid by age, APOE4 status, and clinical group in patients who were Aβ‐positive (centiloid≥19).ResultThe overall frequency of APOE4 carriers was lower in atypical AD (52%) compared to typical AD (66%), particularly for ε4ε4 homozygotes (9% vs 20%). APOE4 frequency increased with age in atypical AD, but showed a bell‐shaped curve in typical AD where highest frequencies were observed between 65‐70 years (Figure). Typical AD showed higher APOE4 frequencies than atypical AD only between the ages of 57 and 69 years. Aβ centiloid was higher in atypical AD compared to typical AD by approximately 16 centiloid units, but did not differ according to APOE4 status (Figure). Aβ centiloid stayed relatively flat with increasing age for both carriers and non‐carriers in atypical AD, but declines with increasing age in typical AD. Relationships between APOE4 and age, as well as centiloid, did not differ between the two atypical AD phenotypes.ConclusionAPOE4 frequency differs between atypical and typical AD but is highly dependent upon age, with higher APOE4 frequency in typical AD only observed between 57 and 69 years. The findings highlight the importance of age and clinical phenotype in understanding the effects of APOE genotype in Alzheimer’s disease.

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