Tau’s Unequal Toll: Why Women’s Brains Pay a Higher Cognitive Price
A meta-analysis of over 1,000 cognitively unimpaired adults, published in Alzheimer’s & Dementia, reveals a significant sex difference in how tau pathology affects cognitive decline. Using longitudinal data and tau PET imaging, researchers found that higher tau burden in key temporal brain regions was associated with a faster rate of cognitive decline in women compared to men. This effect persisted even after accounting for amyloid beta levels and genetic risk factors, suggesting that tau pathology carries a disproportionately greater cognitive cost for women in the preclinical stages of Alzheimer’s disease.
Why it might matter to you:
This finding underscores the critical need for sex-specific models in neurodegenerative disease progression, which directly impacts the development and validation of diagnostic biomarkers. For your work on clinically actionable assays, it suggests that predictive models correlating blood-based proteomic signatures with clinical outcomes may need to be stratified by sex to be accurate. Furthermore, it highlights tau pathology as a key variable that must be effectively captured by multimodal biomarker panels to forecast individual trajectories reliably.
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