👤 Rebecca E Langhough

🔍 Search 📋 Browse 🏷️ Tags ❤️ Favourites ➕ Add 🧬 Extraction
2
Articles
articles
Tobey J Betthauser, Jordan P Teague, Hailey Bruzzone +8 more · 2026 · medRxiv : the preprint server for health sciences · added 2026-04-24
Understanding the time course of Alzheimer's disease biomarkers of amyloid and tau pathology and their temporal relation to clinical symptoms is key to identifying optimal windows for disease interven Show more
Understanding the time course of Alzheimer's disease biomarkers of amyloid and tau pathology and their temporal relation to clinical symptoms is key to identifying optimal windows for disease intervention and planning future drug trials. The goal of this work was to determine the extent to which Sampled Iterative Local Approximation (SILA), an algorithm extensively validated for amyloid PET, is capable of modeling longitudinal tau (T) PET trajectories and estimating person-level tau positivity onset ages in two commonly analyzed brain regions and two tracers from two different cohorts. 385 participants from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI; mean (SD) age = 73.4 (7.3) years) with longitudinal flortaucipir tau PET and 288 participants from the Wisconsin Registry for Alzheimer's Prevention and Wisconsin Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (collectively referred to as WISC; mean (SD) age = 67.4 (6.7) years) with longitudinal MK-6240 tau PET were included in the study. Standard uptake value ratios (SUVRs) in the entorhinal cortex and a meta-temporal ROI were modeled with SILA separately, for each cohort and region. Forward and backward SUVR and T+/- prediction were characterized with ten-fold cross-validation and in-sample validation techniques. Accuracy of estimated T+ onset ages (ETOA) was characterized in T- to T+ converters. Differences in ETOA were tested between SILA was able to accurately estimate retrospective change in tau SUVR in the meta-temporal region regardless of age, sex, Our results suggest SILA can be used to accurately model longitudinal tau PET trajectories and retrospectively estimate individual T+ onset ages in the meta-temporal region. The accuracy of SILA time estimates in entorhinal cortex worsened amongst those with dementia in ADNI suggesting entorhinal cortex may only be suitable for studying the temporal progression of tau during the preclinical time frame. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.64898/2026.04.01.26349872
APOE
Annie Li, Hannah M Klinger, Mabel Seto +24 more · 2026 · Alzheimer's & dementia : the journal of the Alzheimer's Association · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
Women show higher levels of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology than men, but the implications for cognitive decline remain unclear. Determining the extent to which tau burden differentially accelerate Show more
Women show higher levels of Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology than men, but the implications for cognitive decline remain unclear. Determining the extent to which tau burden differentially accelerates cognitive decline in men and women will provide critical insights into sex-specific pathways of disease progression. We leveraged tau positron emission tomography (PET), amyloid beta (Aβ) PET, apolipoprotein E (APOE) ε4 genotyping, and longitudinal cognitive data over approximately 8.6 (standard deviation [SD] = 3.8) years from 1007 cognitively unimpaired adults across three cohorts. Cognitive trajectories were modeled with linear mixed-effects regression including sex × tau × time interactions, and results were synthesized using random-effects meta-analysis. Higher tau burden in medial and lateral temporal regions was associated with faster cognitive decline in women than in men. High tau burden carries a disproportionately greater cognitive cost for women, underscoring the need for sex-specific approaches to early detection and therapeutic intervention in AD. A meta-analysis across three independent cohorts shows that female cognitive advantage at low tau shifts to vulnerability at higher tau. Sex differences in tau-related cognitive decline were consistent after accounting for amyloid burden. Sex-specific rates of cognitive decline should be considered in clinical trial design. Show less
📄 PDF DOI: 10.1002/alz.71031
APOE