Aging Brain (Jan 2023)

Ranking the risk factors for Alzheimer’s disease; findings from the UK Biobank study

  • Michael Allwright,
  • Hamish D Mundell,
  • Andrew N McCorkindale,
  • Richard I. Lindley,
  • Paul J. Austin,
  • Boris Guennewig,
  • Greg T Sutherland

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 3
p. 100081

Abstract

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Background: The cause of the most common form of dementia, sporadic Alzheimer’s disease (AD), remains unknown. This may reflect insufficiently powered studies to date for this multi-factorial disorder. The UK Biobank dataset presents a unique opportunity to rank known risk factors and determine novel variables. Methods: A custom machine learning approach for high dimensionality data was applied to explore prospectively associations between AD in a sub-cohort of 156,209 UK Biobank participants aged 60–70 including more than 2,090 who were subsequently diagnosed with AD. Results: After the possession of the APOE4 allele, the next highest ranked risk factors were other genetic variants within the TOMM40-APOE-APOC1 locus. When stratified by their apolipoprotein epsilon 4 (APOE4) carrier status, the most prominent risk factors in carriers were AST:ALT ratio, the “number of treatments/ medications” taken as well as “time spent in hospital” while protection was conferred by “Sleeplessness/Insomnia”. In non-APOE carriers, lower socioeconomic status and fewer years of education were highly ranked but effect sizes were small relative to APOE4 carriers. Conclusions: Possession of the APOE4 allele was confirmed as the most important risk factor in AD. Other TOMM40-APOE-APOC1 locus variants further moderate the risk of AD in APOE4 carriers. Liver pathology is a novel risk factor in APOE4 carriers while “Sleeplessness/Insomnia” is protective in AD irrespective of APOE4 status. Other factors such as “Number of treatments/ medications” suggest that multimorbidity is an important risk factor for AD. Future treatments aimed at co-morbidities, including liver disease, may concomitantly lower the risk of sporadic AD.

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