Abstract
Background: Mutations in the glucocerebrosidase (GBA) gene are associated with Lewy body (LB) disorders. Objective: To determine the relationship of GBA mutations and APOE4 genotype to LB and Alzheimer disease (AD) pathological findings. Design: Case-control study. Setting: Academic research. Participants: The 187 subjects included patients with primary neuropathological diagnoses of LB disorders with or without AD changes (95 cases), randomly selected patients with AD (without significant LB pathological findings; 60 cases), and controls with neither LB nor AD pathological findings (32 cases). Main Outcome Measures: GBA mutation status, APOE4 genotype, LB pathological findings (assessed according to the third report of the Dementia With Lewy Body Consortium), and Alzheimer plaque and tangle pathological findings (rated by criteria of Braak and Braak, the Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer Disease, and the National Institute on Aging-Reagan Institute). Results: GBA mutations were found in 18% (34 of 187) of all subjects, including 28% (27 of 95) of those with primary LB pathological findings compared with 10% (6 of 60) of those with AD pathological findings and 3% (1 of 32) of those without AD or LB pathological findings (P=.001). GBA mutation status was significantly associated with the presence of cortical LBs (odds ratio, 6.48; 95% confidence interval, 2.45-17.16; P
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CITATION STYLE
Clark, L. N., Kartsaklis, L. A., Gilbert, R. W., Dorado, B., Ross, B. M., Kisselev, S., … Marder, K. (2009). Association of glucocerebrosidase mutations with dementia with Lewy bodies. Archives of Neurology, 66(5), 578–583. https://doi.org/10.1001/archneurol.2009.54
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