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Midlife vascular risk factors and risk of incident dementia: Longitudinal cohort and Mendelian randomization analyses in the UK Biobank.

TitleMidlife vascular risk factors and risk of incident dementia: Longitudinal cohort and Mendelian randomization analyses in the UK Biobank.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2021
AuthorsMalik R, Georgakis MK, Neitzel J, Rannikmäe K, Ewers M, Seshadri S, Sudlow CLM, Dichgans M
JournalAlzheimers Dement
Volume17
Issue9
Pagination1422-1431
Date Published2021 09
ISSN1552-5279
KeywordsBiological Specimen Banks, Cholesterol, Cohort Studies, Dementia, Female, Heart Disease Risk Factors, Humans, Hypertension, Life Style, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Mendelian Randomization Analysis, Middle Aged, United Kingdom
Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Midlife clustering of vascular risk factors has been associated with late-life dementia, but causal effects of individual biological and lifestyle factors remain largely unknown.
METHODS: Among 229,976 individuals (mean follow-up 9 years), we explored whether midlife cardiovascular health measured by Life's Simple 7 (LS7) is associated with incident all-cause dementia and whether the individual components of the score are causally associated with dementia.
RESULTS: Adherence to the biological metrics of LS7 (blood pressure, cholesterol, glycemic status) was associated with lower incident dementia risk (hazard ratio = 0.93 per 1-point increase, 95% confidence interval [CI; 0.89-0.96]). In contrast, there was no association between the composite LS7 score and the lifestyle subscore (smoking, body mass index, diet, physical activity) and incident dementia. In Mendelian randomization analyses, genetically elevated blood pressure was associated with higher risk of dementia (odds ratio = 1.31 per one-standard deviation increase, 95% CI [1.05-1.60]).
DISCUSSION: These findings underscore the importance of blood pressure control in midlife to mitigate dementia risk.

DOI10.1002/alz.12320
Pubmed Linkhttps://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/33749976?dopt=Abstract
page_expoExternal
Alternate JournalAlzheimers Dement
PubMed ID33749976
Grant ListR01 AG054076 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States
U01 AG052409 / AG / NIA NIH HHS / United States

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