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Alzheimer's disease (AD) brain markers are needed to select people with early-stage AD for clinical trials and as quantitative endpoint measures in trials. Using 10 clinical cohorts (N = 9140) and the community volunteer UK Biobank (N = 37,664) we performed region of interest (ROI) and vertex-wise analyses of grey-matter structure (thickness, surface area and volume). We identified 94 trait-ROI significant associations, and 307 distinct cluster of vertex-associations, which partly overlap the ROI associations. For AD versus controls, smaller hippocampus, amygdala and of the medial temporal lobe (fusiform and parahippocampal gyri) was confirmed and the vertex-wise results provided unprecedented localisation of some of the associated region. We replicated AD associated differences in several subcortical (putamen, accumbens) and cortical regions (inferior parietal, postcentral, middle temporal, transverse temporal, inferior temporal, paracentral, superior frontal). These grey-matter regions and their relative effect sizes can help refine our understanding of the brain regions that may drive or precede the widespread brain atrophy observed in AD. An AD grey-matter score evaluated in independent cohorts was significantly associated with cognition, MCI status, AD conversion (progression from cognitively normal or MCI to AD), genetic risk, and tau concentration in individuals with none or mild cognitive impairments (AUC in 0.54-0.70, p-value 

Original publication

DOI

10.1002/hbm.70089

Type

Journal article

Journal

Human brain mapping

Publication Date

02/2025

Volume

46

Addresses

Institute for Molecular Bioscience, The University of Queensland, St Lucia, Queensland, Australia.

Keywords

Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative, Australian Imaging Biomarkers and Lifestyle flagship study of ageing, Alzheimer's Disease Repository Without Borders Investigators, MEMENTO cohort Study Group, Humans, Alzheimer Disease, Disease Progression, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Cohort Studies, Aged, Female, Male, Gray Matter, Cognitive Dysfunction