Amyloid- β and tau deposition influences cognitive and functional decline in Down syndrome

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Abstract

This study investigates whether tau has (i) an independent effect from amyloid-β on changes in cognitive and functional performance and (ii) a synergistic relationship with amyloid-β in the exacerbation of decline in aging Down syndrome (DS). 105 participants with DS underwent baseline PET [18F]-AV1451 and PET [11C]PiB scans to quantify tau deposition in Braak regions II-VI and the Striatum and amyloid-β status respectively. Linear Mixed Effects models were implemented to assess how tau and amyloid-β deposition are related to change over three time points. Tau was a significant independent predictor of cognitive and functional change. The three-way interaction between time, [11C]PiB status and tau was significant in the models of episodic memory and visuospatial cognition. Baseline tau is a significant predictor of cognitive and functional decline, over and above the effect of amyloid-β status. Results suggest a synergistic relationship between amyloid-β status and tau as predictors of change in memory and visuospatial cognition.

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Grigorova, M., Mak, E., Brown, S. S. G., Beresford-Webb, J., Hong, Y. T., Fryer, T. D., … Zaman, S. H. (2022). Amyloid- β and tau deposition influences cognitive and functional decline in Down syndrome. Neurobiology of Aging, 119, 36–45. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.neurobiolaging.2022.07.003

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