Particle.news

Download on the App Store

H63D Variant in HFE Gene More Than Doubles Dementia Risk in Men

Highlighting non-iron pathways, the study advocates broader genetic screening to inform personalized dementia prevention in older men

Image
Professor Olynyk said further research was needed to investigate why this genetic variant increased the risk of dementia for males but not females. Credit: Neuroscience News

Overview

  • Men homozygous for the H63D variant faced more than twice the dementia risk compared to non-carriers in Neurology-published research
  • Women carrying two copies of the H63D variant showed no increased dementia risk, underscoring a sex-specific genetic effect
  • Analysis of 19,114 healthy older adults from the ASPREE trial over a median 6.4-year follow-up provided the study’s data foundation
  • Researchers found no link between serum iron levels and dementia, suggesting inflammation or neural damage may drive the elevated risk
  • Investigators propose routine HFE genetic testing for older men to identify high-risk individuals and enable tailored prevention strategies