Alzheimer's Disease and Cognitive Decline in Patients with Cardiovascular Diseases Along the Heart-Brain Axis

Publication date

2024-04-02

Authors

Trieu, Calvin
van Harten, Argonde C.
Leeuwis, Anna E.
Exalto, Lieza G.
Hooghiemstra, Astrid M.
Verberk, Inge M.W.
Allaart, Cor P.
Brunner-La Rocca, Hans Peter
Kappelle, JaapISNI 0000000389941458
van Oostenbrugge, Robert J.

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

cc_by

Abstract

Background: We hypothesize that Alzheimer's disease (AD)-related pathology may accelerate cognitive decline in patients with cardiovascular diseases. Objective: To investigate the association between blood-based biomarkers of AD, astrocyte activation, and neurodegeneration and cognitive decline. Methods: From the multi-center Heart-Brain study, we included 412 patients with heart failure, carotid occlusive disease or vascular cognitive impairment (age:68.6±9.0) and 128 reference participants (65.7±7.5). Baseline amyloid-β42/40 (Aβ42/40), phosphorylated-tau181 (pTau181), glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), and neurofilament light (NfL) were determined using SiMoA (Quanterix). Memory, attention, language, and executive functioning were evaluated (follow-up:2.1±0.3 years). We applied linear mixed models with terms for biomarker, time and biomarker*time interactions, adjusted for age, sex, education, and site, to assess associations between biomarkers and cognitive decline. Results: Among patients, Aβ42/40 was not associated with cognitive performance at baseline. However, lower Aβ42/40 was associated with steeper decline in global cognition (β±SE:0.04±0.02). Higher pTau181 was associated with worse baseline performance on global cognition (-0.14±0.04) and memory (-0.31±0.09) and with steeper decline in global cognition (-0.07±0.02), memory (-0.09±0.04), attention (-0.05±0.02), and language (-0.10±0.03). Higher GFAP was associated with worse baseline performance on global cognition (-0.22±0.05), memory (-0.43±0.10), attention (-0.14±0.06), language (-0.15±0.05), and executive functioning (-0.15±0.05) and steeper decline in global cognition (-0.05±0.01). Higher NfL was associated with worse baseline performance on global cognition (-0.16±0.04), memory (-0.28±0.09), attention (-0.20±0.06), and executive functioning (-0.10±0.04), but was not associated with performance over time. In reference participants, no associations were found. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that blood-based biomarkers of AD-related pathology predict cognitive decline in patients with cardiovascular diseases.

Keywords

Alzheimer’s disease, carotid stenosis, cognitive dysfunction, heart failure, vascular dementia, General Neuroscience, Clinical Psychology, Geriatrics and Gerontology, Psychiatry and Mental health

Citation

Trieu, C, van Harten, A C, Leeuwis, A E, Exalto, L G, Hooghiemstra, A M, Verberk, I M W, Allaart, C P, Brunner-La Rocca, H P, Kappelle, L J, van Oostenbrugge, R J, Biessels, G J, Teunissen, C E, van der Flier, W M & Heart-Brain Connection Consortium 2024, 'Alzheimer's Disease and Cognitive Decline in Patients with Cardiovascular Diseases Along the Heart-Brain Axis', Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, vol. 98, no. 3, pp. 987-1000. https://doi.org/10.3233/JAD-231096