Objectives: To determine whether cognitive decline associated with the apolipoprotein E (APOE) epsilon4 allele is different in older African Americans than it is in Caucasians.
Design: Performance on a brief screen of cognitive functioning was examined at baseline (N = 1,891) and 4 years later (N = 1,389) to determine the extent to which the presence of APOE epsilon4 affected level of and change in performance, and whether this differed as a function of race, age, initial score, and change in score.
Setting: Five adjacent counties in the Piedmont area of North Carolina.
Participants: In 1986, a stratified random household sample of community residents age 65 and older (n = 4,162; 54% African-American, 45% Caucasian, 1% other race) formed the Duke Established Populations for Epidemiologic Studies of the Elderly. Of those available at the sixth annual wave, 76% were genotyped, with 1,891 providing baseline data on this wave, and the available survivors (n = 1,389) providing longitudinal data 4 years later.
Measurements: The Short Portable Mental Status Questionnaire (SPMSQ), a brief screen of cognitive functioning, was administered to all subjects on both occasions. We examined score at baseline and cognitive decline (i.e., increase of 2+ errors) at follow-up. Control measures included demographic characteristics, health behaviors, health and functional status, and medication use. APOE status was coded as epsilon4 present versus absent.
Results: APOE epsilon4 was significantly and uniquely related to lower score at baseline and significantly increased the odds of cognitive decline by 59%. There was no statistically significant interaction between APOE epsilon4 and age, race, initial SPMSQ score, or SPMSQ score at follow-up.
Conclusion: APOE epsilon4 is modestly, if significantly, related to poorer cognitive functioning and to decline in cognitive functioning. No differences were found by age or race in this community representative sample.