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BackgroundSelected cardiovascular factors, APOE4 carriership, and family history (FH) are robust risk factors for Alzheimer's disease and dementia. While cardiovascular risk tends to affect cognition from midlife, it remains unclear whether heritable risk predicts cardiovascular health in young adulthood and midlife, and whether young-adult cardiovascular health predicts midlife cognition.ObjectiveWe sought to examine how heritable dementia risk relates to cardiovascular health and how these cardiovascular risk factors in young adulthood predict midlife brain volumes and cognition.MethodsWe used data from the CARDIA study, which followed 5115 individuals aged 18-30 at baseline over 30 years. Analyses focused on 2808 participants (Mean age = 60, SD = 3.58) who attended the 30-year visit. We examined associations between APOE4 and FH with baseline and 30-year follow-up measures of cardiovascular risk factors (LDL-C, HDL-C, glucose, blood pressure, body mass index (BMI), smoking), cognition, and brain volumes.ResultsAPOE4 carriers with FH had higher LDL-C and lower HDL-C levels as early as young adulthood, persisting into midlife. BMI and smoking were the only cardiovascular risk factors from young adulthood that predicted midlife cognition. There was no association between young adult cardiovascular risk factors and midlife brain volumes, but those with heritable dementia risk had larger brain volumes in regions vulnerable to midlife atrophy.ConclusionsAPOE4 carriership was associated with an unfavorable lipid profile that started in early adulthood and persisted to later life. Early cardiovascular risk was also associated with midlife cognition, which is earlier than studies typically focusing on later-life cognition.

More information Original publication

DOI

10.1177/13872877251401482

Type

Journal article

Publication Date

2026-01-01T00:00:00+00:00

Volume

109

Pages

757 - 767

Total pages

10

Keywords

APOE4 carriership, Alzheimer's disease, dementia, dyslipidemia, modifiable risk factors, Humans, Female, Male, Adult, Middle Aged, Dementia, Risk Factors, Cardiovascular Diseases, Neuropsychological Tests, Young Adult, Apolipoprotein E4, Heart Disease Risk Factors, Adolescent, Brain, Cognition, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Longitudinal Studies