Cold Spring Harbor molecular case studies, volume 9, issue 3, pages mcs.a006271

Contributions of rare and common variation to early-onset and atypical dementia risk

Carter A Wright 1, 2
Jared P. Taylor 1
James J. Lawlor 1
Belle A Moyers 1
Michelle D. Amaral 1
Zachary T Bonnstetter 1
Princess Carter 3
Veronika Solomon 3
Richard N. Myers 1
Marissa C Natelson Love 3
D. S. Geldmacher 3
Sara J. Cooper 1
E. D. Roberson 3
J Nicholas Cochran 1, 3
Show full list: 14 authors
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2023-06-12
scimago Q2
SJR0.801
CiteScore3.2
Impact factor1.8
ISSN23732873, 23732865
General Medicine
Abstract

We collected and analyzed genomic sequencing data from individuals with clinician-diagnosed early-onset or atypical dementia. Thirty-two patients were previously described, with sixty-eight newly described in this report. Of those sixty-eight, sixty-two patients self-reported white, non-Hispanic ethnicity and six reported as African American, non-Hispanic. Fifty-three percent of patients had a returnable variant. Five patients harbored a pathogenic variant as defined by the American College of Medical Genetics criteria for pathogenicity. A polygenic risk score was calculated for Alzheimer's patients in the total cohort and compared to the scores of a late-onset Alzheimer's cohort and a control set. Patients with early-onset Alzheimer's had higher non-APOE polygenic risk scores than patients with late onset Alzheimer's, supporting the conclusion that both rare and common genetic variation associate with early-onset neurodegenerative disease risk.

Found 
Found 

Top-30

Publishers

1
1
  • We do not take into account publications without a DOI.
  • Statistics recalculated only for publications connected to researchers, organizations and labs registered on the platform.
  • Statistics recalculated weekly.

Are you a researcher?

Create a profile to get free access to personal recommendations for colleagues and new articles.
Share
Cite this
GOST | RIS | BibTex | MLA
Found error?