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. 2020 Apr 30;26(4):1075–1097. doi: 10.1038/s41380-020-0731-7

Table 1.

Genetic, environmental, and lifestyle risk factors for Alzheimer disease (AD) appearance or progression.

Non (purely) genetic risk factors Genetic—chromosomal factors
Depression at any age and late-life depressiona APOE4 and other gene loci, including some variants more prevalent in APOE4(+) patientsc,m, and SORL1 (neuronal apolipoprotein E receptor)o, and rare coding variants in apolipoprotein Bp
Type 2 diabetes mellitusa Amyloid precursor protein (inherited AD form)d
Frequency of social contacts—lonelinessa Presenilin-1 gene (inherited AD form; main cause in autosomal-dominant, early-onset AD)d,u
Benzodiazepines usea Presenilin-2 gene (inherited AD form)d
Low adherence to Mediterranean dietb,l Trisomy 21 (Down syndrome)e
Agingg Immune (epigenetically regulated) responsef and other epigenetic eventsw
Anemia/Very low hemoglobin levelsh, as well as very high hemoglobin levels (U-shaped relation)x Variants in loci in TREM2 and soluble TREM2 modulators, i.e., MS4A4A and MS4A6A, and loci in CD2AP, IQCK, ACE, ADAM10, ADAMTS1, and WWOX, and rare variantsi,j,v aggression
High cortical iron levels*,s and plasma ferritint Variants in loci in IGHG3, ZNF655, GPAA1, OR8G5, IGHV3-7, SLC24A3, and lncRNA AC099552q,r
Grand multiparityk Somatic brain mutations in MAPK, AMPK, and PI3K-AKT pathwayn
Chronic stress (psychological and biological) and inflammationg
Low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterolp
Neuropsychiatric manifestations: psychosis, aggression/agitation, affective symptomsy

Sources: a [7]; b [220]; c [234]; d [235]; e [62]; f [21]; g [8]; h [236]; i [237, 238]; j [239]; k [240]; l [241]; m [242]; n [243]; o [244]; p [245]; q [246]; r [246]; s [247]; t [248]; u [249]; v [250], [251, 252]; w [253]; x [254]; y [255, 256].

*Following postmortem assessment, and mostly referring to risk for cognitive decline in already diagnosed patients with AD.