AI finds several early risk factors to predict Alzheimer’s 7 years early

Evan Walker
Evan Walker TheMediTary.Com |
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Scientists may have found a way to predict the onset of Alzheimer’s early by using AI. AI Jasmin Merdan/Getty Images
  • Past studies have identified some Alzheimer’s early risk factors including age, family history, and genetics.
  • Researchers from the University of California San Francisco have used AI to identify several early risk factors to predict a person’s Alzheimer’s disease up to seven years before symptoms occur.
  • Scientists identified early risk factors affecting both men and women, as well as a few that were sex-specific including erectile dysfunction and an enlarged prostate for men and osteoporosis for women.

According to researchers, around the globe, there are about 69 million people with prodromal Alzheimer’s disease — when a person has signs of mild cognitive decline — and another 315 million with preclinical Alzheimer’s disease where symptoms have yet to develop, but brain changes signal the potential for disease development.

With numbers like these, it’s no wonder why researchers are constantly looking for new ways to lower a person’s risk of developing this type of dementia.

Past studies have identified some Alzheimer’s early risk factors including age, family history, and genetics.

Now, researchers from the University of California San Francisco have used artificial intelligence (AI) to identify several early risk factors to predict a person’s Alzheimer’s disease up to seven years before symptoms occur.

While scientists identified some early risk factors affecting both men and women, they also found a few that were gender-specific including erectile dysfunction and an enlarged prostate for men and osteoporosis for women.

The findings were published in Nature Aging.

In addition to the early risk factors identified in both men and women, researchers also discovered a few gender-specific risk factors.

These include erectile dysfunction and an enlarged prostate in men, and osteoporosis in women.

These findings add to other research concerning these three medical conditions and their possible link to an increased risk for Alzheimer’s disease or dementia.

Research published in June 2015 found an increased risk for both Alzheimer’s disease and non-Alzheimer dementia in people with erectile dysfunction.

A study published in February 2021 discovered that men with an enlarged prostate were persistently at a higher risk for developing Alzheimer’s disease and all-cause dementia.

Research published in December 2021 reported that osteoporosis may increase a person’s likelihood of developing Alzheimer’s disease or Parkinson’s disease in adults 40 years of age and older.

“One thing to emphasize is that these are risks we see at a population level, but for an individual, the model takes into account the combination of diseases,” Tang explained.

How to reduce Alzheimer’s risk

“Nevertheless, a doctor can take the population level risks to counsel patients to aim to control their cholesterol, engage in exercise, take plenty of calcium/vitamin D, or treat osteoporosis to minimize the influence of those diseases on the risks.”
— Alice S. Tang, lead author

“Ultimately, in the future, we imagine a personalized model in the clinic will be able to not only predict risk but also list the risk factors for the individual patient in front of the doctor for more targeted advice and treatments,” she added.

MNT also spoke with Dr. David Merrill, a geriatric psychiatrist and director of the Pacific Neuroscience Institute’s Pacific Brain Health Center in Santa Monica, CA, about this study.

Dr. Merrill commented that it is great to see helpful data coming out of the early use of AI as it’s applied toward identifying those at risk for Alzheimer’s disease sooner rather than later. He also touched on the importance of identifying early risk factors that can potentially be modified, such as high cholesterol and bone Health.

“We know that in some ways our cholesterol is set by our genetics, which we don’t have control over, but we do have control over things like saturated fat content in our diets, which can affect cholesterol levels,” Dr. Merrill explained.

“We know that there are activities such as weight-bearing activities, strength training, improvements in diet and health, and also medical treatments that can address early bone loss or osteopenia to slow down and or prevent osteoporosis. So those efforts can also now be tied to greater brain health with aging, especially in women, which as we know the majority of persons living with Alzheimer’s disease are women.”
— Dr. David Merrill

“It’s particularly important that we identify modifiable risks in women who are vulnerable to developing Alzheimer’s with aging,” he added.

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