No Replication of Alzheimer's Disease Genetics as a Moderator of Combat Exposure's Association with PTSD risk in 138,592 Combat Veterans.

Nature. Mental health
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Abstract

Large-scale cohort and epidemiological studies suggest that posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) confers risk for late-onset Alzheimer's disease (AD) and related dementias (ADRD); however, the basis for this association remains unclear. Several prior studies of military Veterans have reported that carriers of the apolipoprotein E () ε4 gene variant are at heightened risk for the development of PTSD following combat exposure, suggesting that PTSD and ADRD may share some genetic risk. This cohort study was designed to further examine the hypothesis that ADRD genetic risk also confers risk for PTSD. To do so, we examined ε4 and ε2 genotypes, an AD polygenic risk score (PRS), and other Veteran-relevant risk factors for PTSD in age-stratified groups of individuals of European ( = 123,372) and African ( = 15,220) ancestry in the US Department of Veterans Affairs' Million Veteran Program. Analyses revealed no significant main effect associations between the ε4 (or ε2) genotype or the AD PRS on PTSD severity or diagnosis. There were also no significant interactions between measures of AD genetic risk and either combat exposure severity or history of head injury in association with PTSD in any age group. We conclude that the association between PTSD and the primary ADRD genetic risk factor, ε4, that was reported previously was not replicable in the largest relevant dataset in the world. Thus, the epidemiological association between PTSD and ADRD is not likely to be driven by the major genetic factors underlying ADRD risk.

Year of Publication
2024
Journal
Nature. Mental health
Volume
2
Pages
553-561
Date Published
04/2024
ISSN
2731-6076
DOI
10.1038/s44220-024-00225-1
PubMed ID
39247144
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