The method is better than testing only for the well-known genetic variant APOE E4, according to researchers.
APOE E4 has long been considered the strongest genetic predictor of whether someone is likely to develop Alzheimer's, although it is only carried by 10 to 15 per cent of the population and recent research suggests its effects have been overstated.
The polygenic hazard score (PHS), a test developed by the research team that carried out the new study, provides risk estimates for the remaining 85 to 90 per cent of people who do not carry at least one copy of APOE E4 but still have some combination of other genetic variants that put them at risk of Alzheimer's.
The researchers looked at five years of data on 1,081 subjects who did not have dementia, and found the PHS test could predict how long it would take for them to progress to Alzheimer's dementia, as well as how steep their cognitive decline would be, even after taking into account whether they were carriers of APOE E4.
These patients also showed steeper declines on cognitive tests during their lifetimes.
Older individuals in the highest PHS percentiles also showed the highest incidence of Alzheimer's, which is diagnosed with cognitive tests and brain pathology, regardless of their APOE E4 status.
Many scientists now believe that rather than being a disease of aging, Alzheimer's may be the result of a disease process that begins years, perhaps decades, before symptoms of dementia appear.
The new PHS could help in the search for ways to identify those at risk of Alzheimer's long before they show symptoms of dementia, so they can be treated before the disease begins ravaging their brains, the researchers said.
"Our findings have strong implications for disease stratification and secondary prevention trials in Alzheimer's, as well as direct-to-consumer genetic tests, some of which have recently received FDA clearance," said Anders Dale, professor at UC San Diego.
The research was published in the journal Annals of Neurology.
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