Olfaction, Cognitive Impairment, and PET Biomarkers in Community-Dwelling Older Adults


Journal article


Q. Tian, Murat Bilgel, A. Moghekar, L. Ferrucci, S. Resnick
Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, 2022

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APA   Click to copy
Tian, Q., Bilgel, M., Moghekar, A., Ferrucci, L., & Resnick, S. (2022). Olfaction, Cognitive Impairment, and PET Biomarkers in Community-Dwelling Older Adults. Journal of Alzheimer's Disease.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Tian, Q., Murat Bilgel, A. Moghekar, L. Ferrucci, and S. Resnick. “Olfaction, Cognitive Impairment, and PET Biomarkers in Community-Dwelling Older Adults.” Journal of Alzheimer's Disease (2022).


MLA   Click to copy
Tian, Q., et al. “Olfaction, Cognitive Impairment, and PET Biomarkers in Community-Dwelling Older Adults.” Journal of Alzheimer's Disease, 2022.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{q2022a,
  title = {Olfaction, Cognitive Impairment, and PET Biomarkers in Community-Dwelling Older Adults},
  year = {2022},
  journal = {Journal of Alzheimer's Disease},
  author = {Tian, Q. and Bilgel, Murat and Moghekar, A. and Ferrucci, L. and Resnick, S.}
}

Abstract

Background: Olfactory deficits are early features of preclinical Alzheimer’s disease (AD). Whether olfaction is associated with PET biomarkers among community-dwelling older adults is less clear. Objective: Investigate cross-sectional and longitudinal associations of olfaction with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and amyloid-β (Aβ) and tau deposition. Methods: We analyzed 364 initially cognitively normal participants (58% women, 24% black) who had baseline olfaction data and subsequent cognitive assessments during an average 2.4-year. A subset of 129 had PET-PiB (Aβ) (n = 72 repeated) and 105 had 18F-flortaucipir (FTP)-PET (tau) (n = 44 repeated). Olfaction was measured using a 16-item Sniffin’ Sticks Odor Identification Test. The association of olfaction with incident MCI was examined using Cox regression. Associations with PiB-distribution volume ratio (DVR) and FTP-standardized uptake value ratio (SUVR) were examined using partial correlation. We tested whether PiB+/–status modified these associations. Analyses were adjusted for demographics and olfactory test version. Results: 17 (5%) participants developed MCI. Each unit lower odor identification score was associated with 22% higher risk of developing MCI (p = 0.04). In the PET subset, lower scores were associated with higher mean cortical DVR and DVR in orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), precuneus, and middle temporal gyrus (p≤0.04). The “olfaction*PiB+/–” interaction in OFC DVR was significant (p = 0.03), indicating the association was limited to PiB positive individuals. Greater decline in odor identification score was associated with greater increase in anterior OFC DVR and entorhinal tau SUVR (p≤0.03). Conclusion: Among community-dwelling older adults, poorer olfaction predicts incident MCI and is associated with overall and regional Aβ. Greater olfaction decline is associated with faster Aβ and tau accumulation in olfaction-related regions. Whether olfaction predicts AD-related neurodegenerative changes warrants further investigations.