Offspring of two parents with Alzheimer’s
Disease at higher risk
Newswise — Adult-age offspring of parents who have both been
diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease appear to
have an increased risk of developing the
disease compared with the general
population, according to a report in the
March issue of Archives of Neurology, one of
the JAMA/Archives journals.
“Alzheimer’s disease is a common cause of dementia in the U.S.
population and the leading cause of
cognitive impairment in the elderly
population,” according to background
information in the article. Identifying
genes in Alzheimer’s disease patients can
help detect others who are at risk for the
condition.
“Because Alzheimer’s disease is so common in the general
population, it is not uncommon for both
spouses to develop the disease. Offspring of
two such affected individuals would
presumably carry a higher burden of these
Alzheimer’s disease−associated genes.”
Suman Jayadev, M.D., of the University of Washington, Seattle,
and colleagues studied the frequency of
Alzheimer’s disease in adult children of 111
families in which both parents had been
clinically diagnosed with the disease. Ages
at onset of dementia were also noted.
Of the 297 offspring who reached adulthood, 22.6 percent
developed Alzheimer’s disease compared with
an estimated 6 percent to 13 percent of the
general population.
The average age at onset for children of couples with the illness
was 66.3. The risk of developing the disease
increased with age with 31 percent of those
older than age 60 affected and 41.8 percent
of those older than age 70 affected.
“Of the 240 unaffected individuals, 189 (78.8 percent) had not
yet reached age 70 years, suggesting that
the incidence of Alzheimer’s disease (22.6
percent) is an underestimation of the final
incidence rate of Alzheimer’s disease in
this population,” the authors write.
Having additional family members with Alzheimer’s disease did not
increase the risk of developing the disease,
but was associated with a younger age at
onset for those who did develop the illness.
Children with no history of the disease beyond the parents had an
older age at onset (72 years) compared with
those who had one parent with family history
of the disease (60 years) or both parents
with family history of the illness (57
years).
“The role of family history and the specific genes involved in
this phenomenon require a better
definition,” the authors conclude.
“Families with a significant Alzheimer’s disease history may be
more likely to be referred to an Alzheimer’s
disease research center and, thus, the
present patients may be ‘enriched’ for a
particularly Alzheimer’s disease-prone
subgroup.
Following these families as the offspring continue to age will
provide increasingly informative data.”
Editor’s Note: This study was supported by grants from the
National Institute on Aging/National
Institutes of Health and by Veterans Affairs
research funds. Please see the article for
additional information, including other
authors, author contributions and
affiliations, financial disclosures, funding
and support, etc.