About
The global all-cause dementia (DEMENTIA) prevalence (>60y) is estimated at ~4.7%, with 60-80% caused by Alzheimer's Disease (AD), a multi-factorial neurodegenerative disorder manifesting as progressive episodic memory and other cognitive domain decline. Racial/ethnic, gender and socio-economic disparities in dementia risk have been reported. In the absence of a cure, modifiable and non-modifiable risk and protective factors have been identified with wide racial/ethnic disparities. We recently examined pathways among US older adults explaining racial/ethnic disparities in AD/DEMENTIA overall and among men and women separately. We attempt at replicating US findings, using a similar structural equation modeling framework, including socio-economic, lifestyle and health-related mediators, thus ascertaining biological plausibility across cultural settings. Racial and socio-economic disparities in the infectious burden was reported. Among those, H. pylori was recently shown to trigger cognitive impairment and early markers of neurodegeneration, particularly in men. The mediating effect of the infectious burden will be tested separately, to explain both racial/ethnic and socio-economic disparities in AD/DEMENTIA incidence. We will attempt to replicate our US findings, by examining the independent association of H. pylori with those outcomes brain MRI early markers of neurodegeneration and their interaction with other infections in those associations. We also previous examined the interaction between H. pylori and periodontitis in relation to AD/DEMENTIA. In this project, in addition to attempting replication, we further examine those interaction in relation to brain MRI markers of neurodegeneration, while assessing mediation through the metabolome. Given APOE genotype's strong predictive value for AD/DEMENTIA, several mendelian randomization (MR) studies will test whether genetically determined lipid metabolites are related to these outcomes. APOE genotype's differential association with lipids across race will also be tested, while assessing Apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotype's interaction with H. pylori sero-positivity in relation to AD/dementia and brain MRI outcomes. The association between SUA with age-related cognitive decline has been examined, reporting both adverse and protective effects. Whether genetically determined SUA is linked to AD/DEMENTIA risk remains uncertain. SUA's interaction with H. pylori sero-positivity vs. AD/DEMENTIA and early brain MRI markers of neurodegeneration merits investigation. Following a similar methodology as for lipids/APOE, we will test whether genetically determined SUA interacts with H. pylori to determine AD/DEMENTIA risk. Finally, we will generate a polygenic risk score (PRS) for H. pylori, testing it against the metabolome, and then will conduct MR studies of H. pylori PRS, related metabolites and AD/DEMENTIA and brain MRI outcomes.
18 Publications
| Pub ID | Title | Author(s) | Year | Journal |
| 14254 | Alzheimer's Disease polygenic risk, the plasma proteome, and dementia incidence among UK older adults | May A. Beydoun (+10) | 2024 | GeroScience |
| 16361 | Alzheimer's disease polygenic risk's association with all-cause dementia through the plasma metabolome in the UK Biobank study | May A. Beydoun (+10) | 2025 | GeroScience |
| 15826 | Cardiovascular health and its association with dementia, Parkinson's Disease, and mortality among UK older adults | Michael F. Georgescu (+7) | 2025 | Brain Behavior & Immunity - Health |
| 10920 | Cardiovascular health, infection burden and their interactive association with brain volumetric and white matter integrity outcomes in the UK Biobank | May A Beydoun (+10) | 2023 | Brain Behavior and Immunity |
| 10189 | Cardiovascular health, infection burden, and incident dementia in the UK Biobank | Hind A. Beydoun (+8) | 2023 | Alzheimer's & Dementia |
| 10159 | Helicobacter pylori, persistent infection burden and structural brain imaging markers | May A Beydoun (+14) | 2024 | Brain Communications |
| 9258 | Hospital-treated prevalent infections, the plasma proteome and incident dementia among UK older adults | May A. Beydoun (+10) | 2023 | iScience |
| 9369 | Infection burden and its association with neurite orientation dispersion and density imaging markers in the UK Biobank | May A Beydoun (+9) | 2023 | Brain Behavior and Immunity |
| 12753 | Mediating and moderating effects of plasma proteomic biomarkers on the association between poor oral health problems and brain white matter microstructural integrity: the UK Biobank study | May A. Beydoun (+10) | 2024 | Molecular Psychiatry |
| 11962 | Mediating and moderating effects of plasma proteomic biomarkers on the association between poor oral health problems and incident dementia: The UK Biobank study | Hind A. Beydoun (+10) | 2024 | GeroScience |
| 16314 | Multi-dimensional sleep health and dementia risk: a prospective study in the UK Biobank | Tianyi Huang (+4) | 2025 | BMC Medicine |
| 10087 | Pathways explaining racial/ethnic and socio-economic disparities in brain white matter integrity outcomes in the UK Biobank study | Jordan Weiss (+9) | 2024 | SSM - Population Health |
| 9476 | Pathways explaining racial/ethnic and socio-economic disparities in dementia incidence: the UK Biobank study | May A Beydoun (+8) | 2023 | Aging |
| 12144 | Plasma proteomic biomarkers and the association between poor cardiovascular health and incident dementia: The UK Biobank study | May A Beydoun (+11) | 2024 | Brain Behavior and Immunity |
| 14496 | Plasma proteomic biomarkers as mediators or moderators for the association between poor cardiovascular health and white matter microstructural integrity: The UK Biobank study | May A. Beydoun (+13) | 2025 | Alzheimer's & Dementia |
| 15599 | Polypharmacy and its association with dementia, Parkinson's disease, and mortality risk in UK adults: a multistate modeling approach | Jordan Weiss (+10) | 2025 | GeroScience |
| 15414 | Socioeconomic area deprivation and its relationship with dementia, Parkinson's Disease and all-cause mortality among UK older adults: a multistate modeling approach | May A Beydoun (+8) | 2025 | Social Science & Medicine |
| 13253 | Uncovering mediational pathways behind racial and socioeconomic disparities in brain volumes: insights from the UK Biobank study | May A. Beydoun (+9) | 2024 | GeroScience |