Sex Differences in 6-Year Progression of White Matter Hyperintensities in Non-Demented Older Adults: Sydney Memory and Ageing Study
Abdullah Alqarni, Wei Wen, Ben C.P. Lam, Nicole Kochan, Henry Brodaty,, Perminder S. Sachdev, Jiyang Jiang

TL;DR
This study investigates how sex influences the progression of white matter hyperintensities and their impact on cognitive decline over six years in older adults, revealing sex-specific associations.
Contribution
It provides novel insights into sex differences in WMH progression and their cognitive consequences in aging, using longitudinal data and advanced statistical modeling.
Findings
WMH volumes increased annually by 7.70% to 11.78%.
Increases in PVWMH were linked to cognitive decline, especially in visuospatial and memory domains.
Sex moderated the relationship between WMH progression and cognitive decline, with distinct patterns observed in men and women.
Abstract
Objectives: To examine sex differences in the associations between vascular risk factors and 6-year changes in the volume of white matter hyperintensities (WMH), and between changes in WMH volumes and changes in cognitive performance, in a cohort of non-demented older adults. Methods: WMH volumes at 3 time-points (baseline, and 2- and 6-year follow-up) were automatically quantified in participants of Sydney Memory and Ageing Study (N = 605; age range = 70-92 years; 54.78% female). Linear mixed models were applied to examine the effects of vascular risk factors and cognitive consequences of the progression of WMH, as well as the sex moderation effects in the associations. Results: Total (TWMH), periventricular (PVWMH), and deep (DWMH) WMH volumes increased by 9.47%, 7.70%, and 11.78% per year, respectively. No sex differences were found in WMH progression rates. After Bonferroni…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Neurological Disease Mechanisms and Treatments
MethodsSPEED: Separable Pyramidal Pooling EncodEr-Decoder for Real-Time Monocular Depth Estimation on Low-Resource Settings
