Mendelian Randomization Analysis to Assess Whether Magnetic Resonance Imaging Signs of Cerebral Small Vessel Disease Can Cause Cognitive Decline and Dementia
L. Liu, Q. Shen, D. Zhang, Y. Bao, F. Xu, H. Huang, Yanming Xu
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Objective
Cognitive decline and dementia have been linked to cerebral small vessel disease, so we explored using Mendelian randomization whether cerebral small vessel disease visible as 10 neuroimaging signs may cause cognitive decline and dementia.
Methods
We analyzed publicly available data from genome-wide association studies using two-sample Mendelian randomization involving inverse variance weighting, weighted median, MR-Egger, and MR-PRESSO approaches.
Results
Mendelian randomization suggested that cognitive decline can be caused by lacunar stroke (inverse variance weighting, β = −0.012, 95% CI −0.024 to −0.001, P = 0.033). Furthermore, an elevated burden of white matter hyperintensities was associated with an increased risk of Dementia due to Parkinson’s disease (inverse variance weighting, OR 2.035, 95% CI 1.105 to 3.745, P = 0.023). Notably, no significant associations were observed between neuroimaging markers of Cerebral Small Vessel Disease and other types of dementia.
Conclusion
This Mendelian randomization study provides evidence that lacunar stroke and white matter lesions can cause cognitive decline, and that white matter hyperintensity may increase risk of dementia due to Parkinson’s disease. These results underscore the need for further investigations into the neurocognitive effects of cerebral small vessel disease.
期刊介绍:
The JPAD Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer’Disease will publish reviews, original research articles and short reports to improve our knowledge in the field of Alzheimer prevention including: neurosciences, biomarkers, imaging, epidemiology, public health, physical cognitive exercise, nutrition, risk and protective factors, drug development, trials design, and heath economic outcomes.JPAD will publish also the meeting abstracts from Clinical Trial on Alzheimer Disease (CTAD) and will be distributed both in paper and online version worldwide.We hope that JPAD with your contribution will play a role in the development of Alzheimer prevention.