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Title: | Vascular risk factor associations with subjective cognitive decline and mild behavioral impairment |
Authors: | Aundhakar, A Tomaszewski Farias, S Ballard, C Creese, B Corbett, A Pickering, E Roach, P Smith, EE Ismail, Z |
Keywords: | vascular risk factors;diabetes;smoking;subjective cognitive decline;mild behavioral impairment |
Issue Date: | 28-Apr-2025 |
Publisher: | Oxford University Press |
Citation: | Guan D.X. et al. (2025) 'Vascular risk factor associations with subjective cognitive decline and mild behavioral impairment', Brain Communications, 0 (ahead of print), fcaf163, pp. 1 - 32. doi: 10.1093/braincomms/fcaf163. |
Abstract: | Subjective cognitive decline and mild behavioral impairment identify older persons more likely to have early Alzheimer’s disease. Vascular co-pathologies may also contribute to new onset and persistent cognitive and behavioural symptoms later in life. We investigated vascular risk factor associations with subjective cognitive decline and mild behavioral impairment. Cross-sectional data for 1285 (81.0% female) participants without mild cognitive impairment or dementia enrolled in the Canadian Platform for Research Online to Investigate Health, Quality of Life, Cognition, Behaviour, Function, and Caregiving in Aging were analyzed. Vascular risk factors included body mass index class, self-reported clinician diagnoses of hypertension, high cholesterol, diabetes, self-reported smoking, and the cumulative number of vascular risk factors. Outcomes were the Everyday Cognition scale and Mild Behavioral Impairment Checklist. Logistic and negative binomial regressions were used to model odds and severity of subjective cognitive decline and mild behavioral impairment as a function of individual or cumulative vascular risk factors. Having three or more vascular risk factors (odds ratio=1.23, 95% confidence interval [1.04−1.47]), actively smoking (odds ratio=1.54, 95% confidence interval [1.29−1.82]), being overweight (odds ratio=1.46, 95% confidence interval [1.22−1.74]), and having diabetes (odds ratio=1.29, 95% confidence interval [1.09−1.53]) were associated with higher odds of subjective cognitive decline. Having any number of vascular risk factors was dose-dependently associated with higher odds of mild behavioral impairment, as were all five vascular risk factors individually; active smokers (odds ratio=2.67, 95% confidence interval [2.25−3.18]) and obese persons (odds ratio=2.29, 95% confidence interval [1.91−2.75]) had over twice the odds of mild behavioral impairment. Vascular risk factors associations with subjective cognitive decline were stronger in participants with mild behavioral impairment. All vascular risk factors were linked to higher Everyday Cognition and Mild Behavioral Impairment Checklist total scores, indicating greater subjective cognitive decline and mild behavioral impairment symptom severity. Overweight body mass index, hypertension, and high cholesterol associations with subjective cognitive decline and mild behavioral impairment were stronger in middle-aged adults than older adults, but diabetes and active smoking had greater effects in older adults. Vascular risk factors are strongly related to experiences of cognitive and behavioural changes in later life, even in the absence of objective cognitive impairment. Furthermore, vascular associations with subjective cognitive decline symptoms may be more pronounced in persons with concomitant behavioural decline. Vascular pathologies may contribute to both cognitive and behavioural markers traditionally linked to Alzheimer’s disease in older persons, prior to mild cognitive impairment and dementia. |
Description: | Data Availability: Due to the confidential nature of participant demographic health data, CAN-PROTECT study data is not publicly available on a data repository. However, individual access to the data may be provided upon reasonable request to the corresponding author. no specialised in-house scripts or programs were used for this study. Supplementary data are available online at: https://academic.oup.com/braincomms/advance-article/doi/10.1093/braincomms/fcaf163/8121185?searchresult=1#supplementary-data . |
URI: | https://bura.brunel.ac.uk/handle/2438/31212 |
DOI: | https://doi.org/10.1093/braincomms/fcaf163 |
Other Identifiers: | ORCiD: Dylan X. Guan https://orcid.org/0000-0002-7065-1963 ORCiD: Clive Ballard https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0022-5632 ORCiD: Byron Creese https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6490-6037 ORCiD: Anne Corbett https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2015-0316 Article number: fcaf163 |
Appears in Collections: | Dept of Life Sciences Research Papers |
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