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Browsing by Author "Saloner, Rowan"
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Item Development and validation of a harmonized memory score for multicenter Alzheimer's disease and related dementia research(medRxiv, 2025-04-03) Sanderson-Cimino, Mark; Gross, Alden L.; Gaynor, Leslie S.; Paolillo, Emily W.; Saloner, Rowan; Albert, Marilyn S.; Apostolova, Liana G.; Boersema, Brooke; Boxer, Adam L.; Boeve, Bradley F.; Casaletto, Kaitlin B.; Hallgarth, Savannah R.; Diaz, Valentina E.; Clark, Lindsay R.; Maillard, Pauline; Eloyan, Ani; Tomaszewski Farias, Sarah; Gonzales, Mitzi M.; Hammers, Dustin B.; La Joie, Renaud; Cobigo, Yann; Wolf, Amy; Hampstead, Benjamin M.; Mechanic-Hamilton, Dawn; Miller, Bruce L.; Rabinovici, Gil D.; Ringman, John M.; Rosen, Howie J.; Ryman, Sephira G.; Prestopnik, Jillian L.; Salmon, David P.; Smith, Glenn E.; DeCarli, Charles; Rajan, Kumar B.; Jin, Lee-Way; Hinman, Jason; Johnson, David K.; Harvey, Danielle; Fornage, Myriam; Kramer, Joel H.; Staffaroni, Adam M.; Neurology, School of MedicineIntroduction: List-learning tasks are important for characterizing memory in ADRD research, but the Uniform Data Set neuropsychological battery (UDS-NB) lacks a list-learning paradigm; thus, sites administer a range of tests. We developed a harmonized memory composite that incorporates UDS memory tests and multiple list-learning tasks. Methods: Item-banking confirmatory factor analysis was applied to develop a memory composite in a diagnostically heterogenous sample (n=5943) who completed the UDS-NB and one of five list-learning tasks. Construct validity was evaluated through associations with demographics, disease severity, cognitive tasks, brain volume, and plasma phosphorylated tau (p-tau181 and p-tau217). Test-retest reliability was assessed. Analyses were replicated in a racially/ethnically diverse cohort (n=1058). Results: Fit indices, loadings, distributions, and test-retest reliability were adequate. Expected associations with demographics and clinical measures within development and validation cohorts supported validity. Discussion: This composite enables researchers to incorporate multiple list-learning tasks with other UDS measures to create a single metric.Item Sex differences in the clinical manifestation of autosomal dominant frontotemporal dementia(Wiley, 2025) Memel, Molly; Staffaroni, Adam M.; Ilan-Gala, Ignacio; Garcia Castro, Jesús; Kornak, John; Tartaglia, Carmela M.; Saloner, Rowan; VandeBunte, Anna M.; Paolillo, Emily W.; Cadwallader, Claire J.; Chen, Coty; Gorno-Tempini, Maria Luisa; Mandelli, Malu; Apostolova, Liana; Graff-Radford, Neil; Litvan, Irene; Bayram, Ece; Pressman, Peter S.; Miyagawa, Toji; Mackenzie, Ian; Goldman, Jill; Darby, Richard R.; Appleby, Brian S.; Petrucelli, Len; Gendron, Tania; Heuer, Hilary W.; Forseberg, Leah K.; Rojas, Julio C.; Boeve, Brad F.; Brushaber, Nellie; Domoto-Reilly, Kimiko; Ghoshal, Nupur; Lapid, Maria; Pascual, Belen; Lee, Suzee; Ramos, Eliana Marisa; Ramanan, Vijay; Rademakers, Rosa; Rascovsky, Katya; Pantelyat, Alex; Masdeu, Joseph C.; Snyder, Allison; Boxer, Adam L.; Rosen, Howard J.; Casaletto, Kaitlin; ALLFTD Consortium; Neurology, School of MedicineIntroduction: Sex differences are apparent in neurodegenerative diseases but have not been comprehensively characterized in frontotemporal dementia (FTD). Methods: Participants included 337 adults with autosomal dominant FTD enrolled in the ALLFTD Consortium. Clinical assessments and plasma were collected annually for up to 6 years. Linear mixed-effects models investigated how sex and disease stage are associated with longitudinal trajectories of cognition, function, and neurofilament light chain (NfL). Results: While sex differences were not apparent at asymptomatic stages, females showed more rapid declines across all outcomes in symptomatic stages compared to males. In asymptomatic participants, the association between baseline NfL and clinical trajectories was weaker in females versus males, a difference that was not present in symptomatic participants. Discussion: In genetic FTD, females show cognitive resilience in early disease stages followed by steeper clinical declines later in the disease. Baseline NfL may be a less sensitive prognostic tool for clinical progression in females with FTD-causing mutations. Highlights: Females with genetic FTD exhibit overall steeper increases in plasma neurofilament light chain (NfL) than males. Females with genetic FTD outperform NfL levels in asymptomatic stages compared to males. Once symptomatic, females with genetic FTD decline more rapidly than males. Plasma NfL is a stronger prognostic marker in asymptomatic males than females.