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Racial, ethnic and sex-specific mechanisms of obstructive sleep apnea and Alzheimer's disease risk
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Racial, ethnic and sex-specific mechanisms of obstructive sleep apnea and Alzheimer's disease risk

Komal Patel Murali, Joshua Gills, Arlener Turner, Anthony Briggs, Mark Bernard, Elena Valkanova, Alfred K Mbah, Ogie Queen Umasabor-Bubu, Glenna Brewster, Zainab Osakwe, …
Alzheimer's & dementia, Vol.22(1), pp.e71144-n/a
01/2026
PMID: 41588822

Abstract

Alzheimer Disease - epidemiology Alzheimer Disease - ethnology Ethnicity - statistics & numerical data Polysomnography Risk Factors Sex Factors Sleep Apnea, Obstructive - complications Sleep Apnea, Obstructive - epidemiology Sleep Apnea, Obstructive - ethnology Alzheimer's disease—Risk factors Health status disparities Sleep apnea syndromes—Sex differences Hypoxemia—Physiological effect
Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) is associated with Alzheimer's disease (AD) risk. Racial-, ethnic-, and sex-specific mechanisms of OSA and AD risk were examined. We analyzed data from 3978 polysomnography patients without cognitive decline aged ≥ 60 including 663 OSA+ patients (284 non-Hispanic White, 207 Black, 172 Hispanic) matched to OSA- cohorts (1:1, n = 663; 1:4, n = 2652) and followed for AD through 2013. During the 8.5 (standard deviation 1.4) year period, 358 patients developed AD. AD risk was higher for Black (adjusted hazard ratio [aHR] 2.24 [1.24-2.71]), Hispanic (aHR 1.73, [1.38-3.51]), White (aHR 1.83, [1.21-3.37]), male (aHR 2.38, [1.31-3.47]), and female (aHR 1.37, [1.14-2.41]) patients. Hypoxia, sleep fragmentation, and sleep duration (p < 0.01) were associated with increased risk. Black and Hispanic, and female patients showed stronger effects for hypoxia and duration, and fragmentation, respectively. Hypoxia, fragmentation, and duration may underlie racial-, ethnic-, and sex-specific effects of AD risk.
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