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Age-related cognitive decline and associations with sex, education and apolipoprotein E genotype across ethnocultural groups and geographic regions: a collaborative cohort study

Author

Listed:
  • Darren M Lipnicki
  • John D Crawford
  • Rajib Dutta
  • Anbupalam Thalamuthu
  • Nicole A Kochan
  • Gavin Andrews
  • M Fernanda Lima-Costa
  • Erico Castro-Costa
  • Carol Brayne
  • Fiona E Matthews
  • Blossom C M Stephan
  • Richard B Lipton
  • Mindy J Katz
  • Karen Ritchie
  • Jacqueline Scali
  • Marie-Laure Ancelin
  • Nikolaos Scarmeas
  • Mary Yannakoulia
  • Efthimios Dardiotis
  • Linda C W Lam
  • Candy H Y Wong
  • Ada W T Fung
  • Antonio Guaita
  • Roberta Vaccaro
  • Annalisa Davin
  • Ki Woong Kim
  • Ji Won Han
  • Tae Hui Kim
  • Kaarin J Anstey
  • Nicolas Cherbuin
  • Peter Butterworth
  • Marcia Scazufca
  • Shuzo Kumagai
  • Sanmei Chen
  • Kenji Narazaki
  • Tze Pin Ng
  • Qi Gao
  • Simone Reppermund
  • Henry Brodaty
  • Antonio Lobo
  • Raúl Lopez-Anton
  • Javier Santabárbara
  • Perminder S Sachdev
  • Cohort Studies of Memory in an International Consortium (COSMIC)

Abstract

Background: The prevalence of dementia varies around the world, potentially contributed to by international differences in rates of age-related cognitive decline. Our primary goal was to investigate how rates of age-related decline in cognitive test performance varied among international cohort studies of cognitive aging. We also determined the extent to which sex, educational attainment, and apolipoprotein E ε4 allele (APOE*4) carrier status were associated with decline. Methods and findings: We harmonized longitudinal data for 14 cohorts from 12 countries (Australia, Brazil, France, Greece, Hong Kong, Italy, Japan, Singapore, Spain, South Korea, United Kingdom, United States), for a total of 42,170 individuals aged 54–105 y (42% male), including 3.3% with dementia at baseline. The studies began between 1989 and 2011, with all but three ongoing, and each had 2–16 assessment waves (median = 3) and a follow-up duration of 2–15 y. We analyzed standardized Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) and memory, processing speed, language, and executive functioning test scores using linear mixed models, adjusted for sex and education, and meta-analytic techniques. Performance on all cognitive measures declined with age, with the most rapid rate of change pooled across cohorts a moderate -0.26 standard deviations per decade (SD/decade) (95% confidence interval [CI] [-0.35, -0.16], p

Suggested Citation

  • Darren M Lipnicki & John D Crawford & Rajib Dutta & Anbupalam Thalamuthu & Nicole A Kochan & Gavin Andrews & M Fernanda Lima-Costa & Erico Castro-Costa & Carol Brayne & Fiona E Matthews & Blossom C M , 2017. "Age-related cognitive decline and associations with sex, education and apolipoprotein E genotype across ethnocultural groups and geographic regions: a collaborative cohort study," PLOS Medicine, Public Library of Science, vol. 14(3), pages 1-21, March.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pmed00:1002261
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pmed.1002261
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