Abstract

The Apolipoprotein E (APOE) ε4 allele, type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), and cardiovascular disease (CVD) are well-established risk factors for dementia. Relationships between APOE and incidence of T2DM and CVD are not fully understood but may shed light on the mechanisms underlying dementia pathogenesis. Postmenopausal women (N=6,795) from the Women's Health Initiative hormone therapy clinical trial with APOE genotyping and no prior diagnosis of T2DM or CVD were included. We examined associations of APOE status (APOE2+ [ε2/ε2, ε2/ε3], APOE3 [ε3/ε3], and APOE4+ [ε4/ε4, ε3/ε4] carriers) with incidence of T2DM, coronary heart disease (CHD), stroke, and total CVD events using Cox regression. CVD outcomes were examined in baseline non-statin users and adjusted for statin initiation over follow-up to account for possible confounding by statins. Among all participants (mean age 66.7±6.5 years, 100% non-Hispanic white), 451 (6.6%) were using statins at baseline. Over the follow-up (mean 14.9 and 16.0 years for T2DM and CVD, respectively), 1,564 participants developed T2DM and 1,578 developed CVD. T2DM incidence did not differ significantly by APOE status (ps≥0.09). Among non-statin users, APOE4+ had higher incidence of total CVD (hazard ratio [95% confidence interval]=1.18 [1.02-1.38], p=0.03) compared to APOE3 carriers, but risks for CHD (1.09 [0.87-1.36], p=0.47) and stroke (1.14 [0.91-1.44], p=0.27) were not significantly elevated when examined individually. CVD outcomes did not differ between APOE2+ and APOE3 carriers (ps≥0.11). T2DM risk did not differ by APOE status among postmenopausal women, but APOE4+ carriers not using statins had an increased risk of total CVD events.

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