Litcius/Paper detail

Assessing brain and biological aging trajectories associated with Alzheimer’s disease

Winnie S. Liang, Laura H. Goetz, Nicholas J. Schork

2022Frontiers in Neuroscience11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

The development of effective treatments to prevent and slow Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathogenesis is needed in order to tackle the steady increase in the global prevalence of AD. This challenge is complicated by the need to identify key health shifts that precede the onset of AD and cognitive decline as these represent windows of opportunity for intervening and preventing disease. Such shifts may be captured through the measurement of biomarkers that reflect the health of the individual, in particular those that reflect brain age and biological age. Brain age biomarkers provide a composite view of the health of the brain based on neuroanatomical analyses, while biological age biomarkers, which encompass the epigenetic clock, provide a measurement of the overall health state of an individual based on DNA methylation analysis. Acceleration of brain and biological ages is associated with changes in cognitive function, as well as neuropathological markers of AD. In this mini-review, we discuss brain age and biological age research in the context of cognitive decline and AD. While more research is needed, studies show that brain and biological aging trajectories are variable across individuals and that such trajectories are non-linear at older ages. Longitudinal monitoring of these biomarkers may be valuable for enabling earlier identification of divergent pathological trajectories toward AD and providing insight into points for intervention.

Topics & Concepts

Biological ageBrain agingContext (archaeology)DiseaseCognitive declineCognitionAging brainNeuroscienceAlzheimer's diseasePsychologyMedicineDementiaGerontologyBiologyPathologyPaleontologyEpigenetics and DNA MethylationDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchAlzheimer's disease research and treatments