Dear Readers,
In a recent post this month, I focused on a study from Korea that examined whether the cardiovascular risk factors had similar effects on dementia risk in the Korean population as compared to Western populations. In this blog post, I discuss the latest data from Korea that examines the association of APOE e4 and depression to incident (development of ) dementia in elderly Koreans.
This study used data from the 10/66 International Dementia Research Program in Developing Countries. All persons aged 65 or older from two geographic areas in Gwangiu, South Korea, were asked to participate in this study with follow-up examinations occurring two years later.
Participants completed a variety of questionnaires that included: (1) 30 questions from Korean Geriatric Depression scale ( including supplemental items from the Geriatric Depression Scale, Beck Depression Inventory, and the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale; (2) a review of alcohol history, physical activity, disability, vascular risk factors and measured obesity (BMI>25 kg/m2); (3) cognitive assessment testing (Mini-mental state examination, the Clinical dementia rating (CDR) scale, Instrument Activities of Daily living scale); and (4) APOE e4 genotyping.
A diagnosis of dementia was determined using standard criteria for dementia, Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) and vascular dementia (VaD) by committee. The diagnosis of clinical depression was determined by utilizing validated cutoff scores (against psychiatric diagnoses specific for the Korean population).
Of the initial 732 participants, 518 (83 percent) completed all evaluations at follow-up with 45 participants developing dementia (34 with AD, seven with VaD and four with “other dementia”) over a two-year period. APOE e4 and baseline depression were significantly associated with the incident dementia. When other factors were added to the models, the association between APOE 4 and dementia were unchanged, whereas the association of depression and dementia was no longer significant. Persons with a +APOE e4 genotype / + depression had a nine- fold increased risk of developing dementia compared to those with -APOE e4 genotype/- depression. When other factors were added to this model, the associations were weakened but still remained significant. Gender differences were noted, in that, men had approximately a four times higher risk of developing dementia if they were classified as +APOE e4 /+depression compared to + APOE e4/+ depression women.
This study adds to the few population based studies from Asia that have examined the association of depression and APOE e4 to the development of dementia. The gender differences noted for risk of dementia are interesting, yet it is unclear as to the possible biological mechanisms underlying these findings. Nevertheless, this study supports findings from Western studies regarding the role of depression and APOEe4 to increased risk of dementia, and suggests that perhaps treating a potentially modifiable risk factor such as depression could modify this relationship and delay the development of dementia.
Here are three articles you can refer to, if you wish to learn about this particular study or the latest research on APOE4, depression and dementia in the Korean population:
- Kim JM, Kim SY, Bae KY et al. Apolipoprotein E4 Genotype and Depressive Symptoms as Risk factors for Dementia in an Older Korean Population. Psychiatry Investig 2010;7:135-140
- Prince M, Acosta D, Chiu H et al. 10/66 Dementia Research Group: Dementia diagnosis in developing countries: A cross cultural validation study. Lancet 2003; 361: 909-917
- Kim JM, Stewart R, Kim SW et al. Interactions between life stressor and susceptibility genes (5-HTTLPR and BDNF) on depression in Korean elders. Biol Psychiatry 2007; 62:423-428
Thanks for reading.
Neelum T. Aggarwal, M.D.
Steering Committee Member, ADCS
This post originally appeared in Alzheimer’s Insights, an ADCS Blog.