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    https://hdl.handle.net/2445/223948| Title: | Decreased practice effects in cognitively unimpaired amyloid betapositive individuals: a multicenter, longitudinal, cohort study | 
| Author: | Tort Merino, Adrià Pérez Millan, Agnès Falgàs Martínez, Neus Borrego Écija, Sergi Esteller, Diana Bosch, Bea Castellví, Magdalena Juncà Parella, Jordi del Val-Guardiola, Andrea Fernández Villullas, Guadalupe Antonell Boixader, Anna Sanchez-Saudinos, Maria Belen Rubio-Guerra, Sara Zhu, Nuole Garcia-Martinez, Maria Pozueta, Ana Estanga, Ainara Ecay-Torres, Mirian de Luis, Carolina Lopez Tainta, Mikel Altuna, Miren Rodriguez-Rodriguez, Eloy Sanchez-Juan, Pascual Martinez-Lage, Pablo Lleo, Alberto Fortea, Juan Illán-Gala, Ignacio Balasa, Mircea Lladó Plarrumaní, Albert Rami, Lorena Sanchez del Valle Díaz, Raquel | 
| Keywords: | Biotecnología Cellular and molecular neuroscience Ciências biológicas ii Clinical neurology Developmental neuroscience Educação física Enfermagem Epidemiology Farmacia General medicine Geriatrics and gerontology Health policy Interdisciplinar Medicina i Medicina ii Neurology (clinical) Odontología Psicología Psychiatry and mental health Age Aged Alzheimer disease Alzheimer's disease Amyloid beta-peptides Association Cognition Cognitive dysfunction Cohort studies Decline Dementia Early detection Female Humans Impairment Informatio Longitudinal studies Male Memory Middle aged Neurodegeneration Neuropsychological assessment Neuropsychological tests Normal older-adults Practice effects Practice, psychological Preclinical alzheimer-disease Subtle cognitive declin Subtle cognitive decline | 
| Issue Date: | 1-Mar-2025 | 
| Abstract: | INTRODUCTION We aimed to determine whether cognitively unimpaired (CU) amyloid- beta-positive (A beta+) individuals display decreased practice effects on serial neuropsychological testing. METHODS We included 209 CU participants from three research centers, 157 A beta- controls and 52 A beta+ individuals. Participants underwent neuropsychological assessment at baseline and annually during a 2-year follow-up. We used linear mixed-effects models to analyze cognitive change over time between the two groups, including time from baseline, amyloid status, their interaction, age, sex, and years of education as fixed effects and the intercept and time as random effects. RESULTS The A beta+ group showed reduced practice effects in verbal learning (beta = -1.14, SE = 0.40, p = 0.0046) and memory function (beta = -0.56, SE = 0.19, p = 0.0035), as well as in language tasks (beta = -0.59, SE = 0.19, p = 0.0027). DISCUSSION Individuals with normal cognition who are in the Alzheimer's continuum show decreased practice effects over annual neuropsychological testing. Our findings could have implications for the design and interpretation of primary prevention trials. Highlights This was a multicenter study on practice effects in asymptomatic A beta+ individuals. We used LME models to analyze cognitive trajectories across multiple domains. Practice-effects reductions might be an indicator of subtle cognitive decline. Implications on clinical and research settings within the AD field are discussed. | 
| Note: | https://doi.org/10.1002/alz.70016 | 
| It is part of: | Alzheimers & Dementia, 2025, 21, 3, e70016 | 
| URI: | https://hdl.handle.net/2445/223948 | 
| Related resource: | https://doi.org/10.1002/alz.70016 | 
| ISSN: | Tort-Merino, Adria; Perez-Millan, Agnes; Falgas, Neus; Borrego-ecija, Sergi; Esteller, Diana; Bosch, Bea; Castellvi, Magdalena; Junca-Parella, Jordi; (2025). Decreased practice effects in cognitively unimpaired amyloid betapositive individuals: a multicenter, longitudinal, cohort study. Alzheimers & Dementia, 21(3), e70016-. DOI: 10.1002/alz.70016 | 
| Appears in Collections: | Articles publicats en revistes (IDIBAPS: Institut d'investigacions Biomèdiques August Pi i Sunyer) | 
Files in This Item:
| File | Description | Size | Format | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tort-Merino et al. (2025).pdf | 1.61 MB | Adobe PDF | View/Open | 
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