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Auditory brainstem responses as a biomarker for cognition

Auditory brainstem responses as a biomarker for cognition
Auditory brainstem responses as a biomarker for cognition
A non-invasive, accessible and effective biomarker is critical to the diagnosis, monitoring and treatment of age-related cognitive decline. Recent work has suggested a strong association between auditory brainstem responses (ABR) and cognitive function in aging macaques. Here we show in 118 human participants (66 females; age range=18-92 years; hearing loss = -5 to 70 dB HL) that cognition is associated with both age and hearing level, but this triad relationship is mainly driven by the age factor. After adjusting for age, cognition is still significantly associated with both the ABR wave V amplitude (B, 0.110, 95% CI, 0.018– 0.202; p = 0.020) and latency (B, -0.101, 95% CI, -0.186– -0.016; p = 0.021). Importantly, this age-adjusted ABR-cognition association is primarily driven by older individuals and language-dependent cognitive functions. We also perform the area under the curve (AUC) of the receiver-operating-characteristic analysis and find that the ABR wave V amplitude is best for detecting good cognitive performers (AUC = 0.96) whereas the wave V latency is best for detecting poor ones (AUC = 0.86). The present result not only confirms the previous animal work in humans but also shows the clinical potential of using auditory brainstem responses to improve diagnosis and treatment of age-related cognitive decline.
2399-3642
Hamza, Yasmeen
d6e729c6-e95c-4ae6-88ba-d4019648d205
Yang, Ye
62f1a148-f3e9-4ea5-a347-e29502a8609a
Vu, Janie
d3ecf255-0e9f-47e9-95fa-d609c3878b5a
Abdelmalek, Antoinette
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Malekifar, Mobina
ac3bd428-3838-4857-8698-c18351650a38
Barnes, Carol A.
5bab31e3-faee-42af-8cfb-d9129ecd8ab6
Zeng, Fan Gang
b23758e4-029d-4428-97bf-2613514aac71
Hamza, Yasmeen
d6e729c6-e95c-4ae6-88ba-d4019648d205
Yang, Ye
62f1a148-f3e9-4ea5-a347-e29502a8609a
Vu, Janie
d3ecf255-0e9f-47e9-95fa-d609c3878b5a
Abdelmalek, Antoinette
3e01653a-6024-4561-93b6-a58602f5bdcf
Malekifar, Mobina
ac3bd428-3838-4857-8698-c18351650a38
Barnes, Carol A.
5bab31e3-faee-42af-8cfb-d9129ecd8ab6
Zeng, Fan Gang
b23758e4-029d-4428-97bf-2613514aac71

Hamza, Yasmeen, Yang, Ye, Vu, Janie, Abdelmalek, Antoinette, Malekifar, Mobina, Barnes, Carol A. and Zeng, Fan Gang (2024) Auditory brainstem responses as a biomarker for cognition. Communications Biology, 7 (1), [1653]. (doi:10.1038/s42003-024-07346-4).

Record type: Article

Abstract

A non-invasive, accessible and effective biomarker is critical to the diagnosis, monitoring and treatment of age-related cognitive decline. Recent work has suggested a strong association between auditory brainstem responses (ABR) and cognitive function in aging macaques. Here we show in 118 human participants (66 females; age range=18-92 years; hearing loss = -5 to 70 dB HL) that cognition is associated with both age and hearing level, but this triad relationship is mainly driven by the age factor. After adjusting for age, cognition is still significantly associated with both the ABR wave V amplitude (B, 0.110, 95% CI, 0.018– 0.202; p = 0.020) and latency (B, -0.101, 95% CI, -0.186– -0.016; p = 0.021). Importantly, this age-adjusted ABR-cognition association is primarily driven by older individuals and language-dependent cognitive functions. We also perform the area under the curve (AUC) of the receiver-operating-characteristic analysis and find that the ABR wave V amplitude is best for detecting good cognitive performers (AUC = 0.96) whereas the wave V latency is best for detecting poor ones (AUC = 0.86). The present result not only confirms the previous animal work in humans but also shows the clinical potential of using auditory brainstem responses to improve diagnosis and treatment of age-related cognitive decline.

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s42003-024-07346-4 - Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 2 December 2024
Published date: 19 December 2024
Additional Information: Publisher Copyright: © The Author(s) 2024.

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 502040
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/502040
ISSN: 2399-3642
PURE UUID: c7818867-accf-4d7c-a784-9aaa8f8cd21b
ORCID for Yasmeen Hamza: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3294-6629

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Date deposited: 13 Jun 2025 17:36
Last modified: 22 Aug 2025 02:43

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Contributors

Author: Yasmeen Hamza ORCID iD
Author: Ye Yang
Author: Janie Vu
Author: Antoinette Abdelmalek
Author: Mobina Malekifar
Author: Carol A. Barnes
Author: Fan Gang Zeng

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