Association of Education and Intracranial Volume with Cognitive Trajectories and Mortality Rates Across the Alzheimer Disease Continuum

Anna C. Van Loenhoud, Colin Groot, Diana I. Bocancea, Frederik Barkhof, Charlotte Teunissen, Philip Scheltens, Wiesje M. Van De Flier, Rik Ossenkoppele

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

Abstract

Objective: To investigate relationships of education and intracranial volume (ICV) (factors related to cognitive and brain reserve, respectively) with cognitive trajectories and mortality in individuals with biomarker-defined Alzheimer disease (AD).MethodsWe selected 1,298 β-amyloid-positive memory clinic patients with subjective cognitive decline (SCD, n = 142), mild cognitive impairment (MCI, n = 274), or AD dementia (n = 882) from the Amsterdam Dementia Cohort. All participants underwent baseline MRI and neuropsychological assessment, and 68% received cognitive follow-up (median 2.3 years, interquartile range 2.4). Mortality data were collected from the Central Public Administration. In the total sample and stratified by disease stage (i.e., SCD/MCI vs dementia), we examined education and ICV as predictors of baseline and longitudinal cognitive performance on 5 cognitive domains (memory, attention, executive, language, and visuospatial functions; linear mixed models) and time to death (Cox proportional hazard models). Analyses were adjusted for age, sex, whole brain gray matter atrophy, and MRI field strength.ResultsEducation and ICV showed consistent positive associations with baseline cognition across disease stages. Longitudinally, we observed a relationship between higher education and faster cognitive decline among patients with dementia on global cognition, memory, executive function, and language (range β = -0.06 to -0.13; all p < 0.05). Furthermore, in the total sample, both higher education and larger ICV were related to lower mortality risk (hazard ratio 0.84 and 0.82, respectively; p < 0.05).DiscussionIn this β-amyloid-positive memory clinic sample, both cognitive and brain reserve were positively associated with baseline cognition, whereas only education was related to longitudinal cognition (i.e., accelerated decline among more highly educated patients with dementia). Higher education and ICV both moderately attenuated overall mortality risk in AD.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)E1679-E1691
JournalNeurology
Volume98
Issue number16
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2022

Subject classification (UKÄ)

  • Neurology

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