162 results on '"Derby CA"'
Search Results
2. Determinants of cognitive performance and decline in 20 diverse ethno-regional groups: A COSMIC collaboration cohort study
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Lipnicki, DM, Makkar, SR, Crawford, JD, Thalamuthu, A, Kochan, NA, Lima-Costa, MF, Castro-Costa, E, Ferri, CP, Brayne, C, Stephan, B, Llibre-Rodriguez, JJ, Llibre-Guerra, JJ, Valhuerdi-Cepero, AJ, Lipton, RB, Katz, MJ, Derby, CA, Ritchie, K, Ancelin, M-L, Carrière, I, Scarmeas, N, Yannakoulia, M, Hadjigeorgiou, GM, Lam, L, Chan, W-C, Fung, A, Guaita, A, Vaccaro, R, Davin, A, Kim, KW, Han, JW, Suh, SW, Riedel-Heller, SG, Roehr, S, Pabst, A, van Boxtel, M, Köhler, S, Deckers, K, Ganguli, M, Jacobsen, EP, Hughes, TF, Anstey, KJ, Cherbuin, N, Haan, MN, Aiello, AE, Dang, K, Kumagai, S, Chen, T, Narazaki, K, Ng, TP, Gao, Q, Nyunt, MSZ, Scazufca, M, Brodaty, H, Numbers, K, Trollor, JN, Meguro, K, Yamaguchi, S, Ishii, H, Lobo, A, Lopez-Anton, R, Santabárbara, J, Leung, Y, Lo, JW, Popovic, G, Sachdev, PS, Lipnicki, DM, Makkar, SR, Crawford, JD, Thalamuthu, A, Kochan, NA, Lima-Costa, MF, Castro-Costa, E, Ferri, CP, Brayne, C, Stephan, B, Llibre-Rodriguez, JJ, Llibre-Guerra, JJ, Valhuerdi-Cepero, AJ, Lipton, RB, Katz, MJ, Derby, CA, Ritchie, K, Ancelin, M-L, Carrière, I, Scarmeas, N, Yannakoulia, M, Hadjigeorgiou, GM, Lam, L, Chan, W-C, Fung, A, Guaita, A, Vaccaro, R, Davin, A, Kim, KW, Han, JW, Suh, SW, Riedel-Heller, SG, Roehr, S, Pabst, A, van Boxtel, M, Köhler, S, Deckers, K, Ganguli, M, Jacobsen, EP, Hughes, TF, Anstey, KJ, Cherbuin, N, Haan, MN, Aiello, AE, Dang, K, Kumagai, S, Chen, T, Narazaki, K, Ng, TP, Gao, Q, Nyunt, MSZ, Scazufca, M, Brodaty, H, Numbers, K, Trollor, JN, Meguro, K, Yamaguchi, S, Ishii, H, Lobo, A, Lopez-Anton, R, Santabárbara, J, Leung, Y, Lo, JW, Popovic, G, and Sachdev, PS
- Published
- 2019
3. Age at natural menopause and risk of incident cardiovascular disease: a pooled analysis of individual patient data.
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Zhu D, Chung H-F, Dobson AJ, Pandeya N, Giles GG, Bruinsma F, Brunner EJ, Kuh D, Hardy R, Avis NE, Gold EB, Derby CA, Matthews KA, Cade JE, Greenwood DC, Demakakos P, Brown DE, Sievert LL, Anderson D, Hayashi K, Lee JS, Mizunuma H, Tillin T, Simonsen MK, Adami H-O, Weiderpass E, Mishra GD, Zhu D, Chung H-F, Dobson AJ, Pandeya N, Giles GG, Bruinsma F, Brunner EJ, Kuh D, Hardy R, Avis NE, Gold EB, Derby CA, Matthews KA, Cade JE, Greenwood DC, Demakakos P, Brown DE, Sievert LL, Anderson D, Hayashi K, Lee JS, Mizunuma H, Tillin T, Simonsen MK, Adami H-O, Weiderpass E, and Mishra GD
- Abstract
BACKGROUND:Early menopause is linked to an increased risk of cardiovascular disease mortality; however, the association between early menopause and incidence and timing of cardiovascular disease is unclear. We aimed to assess the associations between age at natural menopause and incidence and timing of cardiovascular disease. METHODS:We harmonised and pooled individual-level data from 15 observational studies done across five countries and regions (Australia, Scandinavia, the USA, Japan, and the UK) between 1946 and 2013. Women who had reported their menopause status, age at natural menopause (if postmenopausal), and cardiovascular disease status (including coronary heart disease and stroke) were included. We excluded women who had hysterectomy or oophorectomy and women who did not report their age at menopause. The primary endpoint of this study was the occurrence of first non-fatal cardiovascular disease, defined as a composite outcome of incident coronary heart disease (including heart attack and angina) or stroke (including ischaemic stroke or haemorrhagic stroke). We used Cox proportional hazards models to estimate multivariate hazard ratios (HRs) and 95% CIs for the associations between age at menopause and incident cardiovascular disease event. We also adjusted the model to account for smoking status, menopausal hormone therapy status, body-mass index, and education levels. Age at natural menopause was categorised as premenopausal or perimenopausal, younger than 40 years (premature menopause), 40-44 years (early menopause), 45-49 years (relatively early), 50-51 years (reference category), 52-54 years (relatively late), and 55 years or older (late menopause). FINDINGS:Overall, 301 438 women were included in our analysis. Of these 301 438 women, 12 962 (4·3%) had a first non-fatal cardiovascular disease event after menopause, of whom 9369 (3·1%) had coronary heart disease and 4338 (1·4%) had strokes. Compared with women who had menopause at age 50-51 years, the
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- 2019
4. Dietary factors in relation to weight change among men and women from two southeastern New England communities
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Parker, DR, primary, Gonzalez, S, additional, Derby, CA, additional, Gans, KM, additional, Lasater, TM, additional, and Carleton, RA, additional
- Published
- 1997
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5. Cognitive activities delay onset of memory decline in persons who develop dementia.
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Hall CB, Lipton RB, Sliwinski M, Katz MJ, Derby CA, Verghese J, Hall, C B, Lipton, R B, Sliwinski, M, Katz, M J, Derby, C A, and Verghese, J
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- 2009
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6. Lipid changes during the menopause transition in relation to age and weight: the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation.
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Derby CA, Crawford SL, Pasternak RC, Sowers M, Sternfeld B, and Matthews KA
- Abstract
Few studies have prospectively examined lipid changes across the menopause transition or in relation to menopausal changes in endogenous hormones. The relative independent contributions of menopause and age to lipid changes are unclear. Lipid changes were examined in relation to changes in menopausal status and in levels of estradiol and follicle-stimulating hormone in 2,659 women followed in the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (1995-2004). Baseline age was 42-52 years, and all were initially pre- or perimenopausal. Women were followed annually for up to 7 years (average, 3.9 years). Lipid changes occurred primarily during the later phases of menopause, with menopause-related changes similar in magnitude to changes attributable to aging. Total cholesterol, low density lipoprotein cholesterol, triglycerides, and lipoprotein(a) peaked during late peri- and early postmenopause, while changes in the early stages of menopause were minimal. The relative odds of low density lipoprotein cholesterol (> or =130 mg/dL) for early postmenopausal, compared with premenopausal, women were 2.1 (95% confidence interval: 1.5, 2.9). High density lipoprotein cholesterol also peaked in late peri- and early postmenopause. Results for estradiol and follicle-stimulating hormone confirmed the results based on status defined by bleeding patterns. Increases in lipids were smallest in women who were heaviest at baseline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2009
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7. A genotype of exceptional longevity is associated with preservation of cognitive function.
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Barzilai N, Atzmon G, Derby CA, Bauman JM, and Lipton RB
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- 2006
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8. A new screening tool for cervical dystonia.
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Saunders-Pullman R, Soto-Valencia J, Costan-Toth C, Shriberg J, Raymond D, Derby CA, Lipton RB, and Bressman SB
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- 2005
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9. Migraine with aura: association with myocardial infarction and stroke is modified by cardiovascular risk status.
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Lipton RB and Derby CA
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- 2008
10. Leisure activities and the risk of dementia in the elderly.
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Verghese J, Lipton RB, Katz MJ, Hall CB, Derby CA, Kuslansky G, Ambrose AF, Sliwinski M, and Buschke H
- Published
- 2003
11. Radical prostatectomy versus watchful waiting.
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Stuart ME, Strite SA, Marantz PR, Hall CB, Derby CA, Liss HK, Elmore JG, Sonpavde G, Bill-Axelson A, Holmberg L, and Johansson J
- Published
- 2005
12. Exposure to air pollution is associated with adipokines in midlife women: The Study of Women's Health Across the Nation.
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Wang X, Karvonen-Gutierrez CA, Mancuso P, Gold EB, Derby CA, Kravitz HM, Greendale G, Wu X, Ebisu K, Schwartz J, and Park SK
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- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Ozone analysis, Women's Health, Nitrogen Dioxide analysis, Adiponectin blood, United States, Air Pollution statistics & numerical data, Air Pollutants analysis, Particulate Matter analysis, Environmental Exposure statistics & numerical data, Adipokines blood
- Abstract
This study examined the associations between ambient air pollution exposure, including fine particulate matter (PM
2.5 ), nitrogen dioxide (NO2 ), and ozone (O3 ), with serum levels of high molecular weight (HMW) adiponectin, leptin, and soluble leptin receptors (sOB-R) in midlife women. The analysis included 1551 participants from the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (median age = 52.3 years) with adipokine data from 2002 to 2003. Annual air pollution exposures were assigned by linking residential addresses with high-resolution machine learning models at a 1-km2 resolution. Multivariable linear regression and Bayesian kernel machine regression (BKMR) were used to evaluate the associations for individual pollutants and pollutant mixtures. After adjusting for confounders in linear regression models, an interquartile range increase in PM2.5 (2.5 μg/m3 ) was associated with a 4.6 % lower HMW adiponectin level (95 % CI: -8.8 %, -0.3 %). Exposure to air pollutant mixtures showed negative associations with HMW adiponectin and positive associations with leptin levels in BKMR models. These findings suggest that exposures to PM2.5 , NO2 , and O3 are associated with adverse levels of adipokines, which may contribute to obesity-related outcomes. Further research is needed to confirm these findings and explore the underlying biological mechanisms., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2024
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13. High-density lipoprotein over midlife and future cognition in women: The SWAN HDL ancillary study.
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Qi M, Billheimer J, Chang CH, Janssen I, Brooks MM, Orchard T, Karlamangla AS, Barinas-Mitchell E, Derby CA, McConnell D, Crawford S, and El Khoudary SR
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Context: Limited data provides evidence-based insights on the association between comprehensive metrics of high-density lipoproteins (HDL) and cognitive performance, especially in midlife women for whom benefit might be the greatest., Objective: To assess the associations of serum HDL metrics including HDL lipid content [HDL cholesterol, phospholipid (HDL-PL), triglyceride], proteins/subclasses [apolipoprotein A-1 (apoA-1); small, medium, large, total HDL particle (HDL-P); and HDL size], and cholesterol efflux capacity with cognitive performance in midlife women., Methods: This prospective cohort study was conducted among 503 midlife women (1234 observations) from the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation HDL ancillary study. Joint models were applied to examine associations of HDL metrics assessed at midlife (50.2 ± 2.9 years, baseline of the current study) and their changes over midlife (6.1 ± 3.9 years of duration) with subsequent cognitive performance [working memory (Digit Span Backward Test), processing speed (Symbol Digit Modalities Test), and episodic memory immediate and delayed recall (East Boston memory test)] assessed repeatedly (maximum 5 times) 1.5 ± 1 years later over 7.72 ± 4.10 years of follow up., Results: Higher total HDL-P and smaller HDL size at midlife were associated with a better subsequent immediate recall, delayed recall and/or processing speed. Greater increase in HDL-PL, apoA-1, medium HDL-P, and total HDL-P and less increase in HDL size over midlife were associated with a better subsequent immediate and/or delayed recall., Conclusions: Enhancing specific serum HDL metrics during midlife could be promising in cognitive restoration, particularly memory, the initial and predominant symptom of Alzheimer's disease., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. All rights reserved. For commercial re-use, please contact reprints@oup.com for reprints and translation rights for reprints. All other permissions can be obtained through our RightsLink service via the Permissions link on the article page on our site—for further information please contact journals.permissions@oup.com. See the journal About page for additional terms.)
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- 2024
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14. Vasomotor Symptom Trajectories and Risk of Incident Diabetes.
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Hedderson MM, Liu EF, Lee C, El Khoudary SR, Gold EB, Derby CA, and Thurston RC
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- 2024
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15. Blood Pressure, Antihypertensive Use, and Late-Life Alzheimer and Non-Alzheimer Dementia Risk: An Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis.
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Lennon MJ, Lipnicki DM, Lam BCP, Crawford JD, Schutte AE, Peters R, Rydberg-Sterner T, Najar J, Skoog I, Riedel-Heller SG, Röhr S, Pabst A, Lobo A, De-la-Cámara C, Lobo E, Lipton RB, Katz MJ, Derby CA, Kim KW, Han JW, Oh DJ, Rolandi E, Davin A, Rossi M, Scarmeas N, Yannakoulia M, Dardiotis T, Hendrie HC, Gao S, Carriere I, Ritchie K, Anstey KJ, Cherbuin N, Xiao S, Yue L, Li W, Guerchet M, Preux PM, Aboyans V, Haan MN, Aiello A, Scazufca M, and Sachdev PS
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- Humans, Aged, Male, Female, Aged, 80 and over, Longitudinal Studies, Risk Factors, Alzheimer Disease epidemiology, Alzheimer Disease drug therapy, Antihypertensive Agents therapeutic use, Hypertension drug therapy, Hypertension epidemiology, Hypertension complications, Blood Pressure drug effects, Dementia epidemiology
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: Previous randomized controlled trials and longitudinal studies have indicated that ongoing antihypertensive use in late life reduces all-cause dementia risk, but the specific impact on Alzheimer dementia (AD) and non-AD risk remains unclear. This study investigates whether previous hypertension or antihypertensive use modifies AD or non-AD risk in late life and the ideal blood pressure (BP) for risk reduction in a diverse consortium of cohort studies., Methods: This individual participant data meta-analysis included community-based longitudinal studies of aging from a preexisting consortium. The main outcomes were risk of developing AD and non-AD. The main exposures were hypertension history/antihypertensive use and baseline systolic BP/diastolic BP. Mixed-effects Cox proportional hazards models were used to assess risk and natural splines were applied to model the relationship between BP and the dementia outcomes. The main model controlled for age, age
2 , sex, education, ethnoracial group, and study cohort. Supplementary analyses included a fully adjusted model, an analysis restricting to those with >5 years of follow-up and models that examined the moderating effect of age, sex, and ethnoracial group., Results: There were 31,250 participants from 14 nations in the analysis (41% male) with a mean baseline age of 72 (SD 7.5, range 60-110) years. Participants with untreated hypertension had a 36% (hazard ratio [HR] 1.36, 95% CI 1.01-1.83, p = 0.0406) and 42% (HR 1.42, 95% CI 1.08-1.87, p = 0.0135) increased risk of AD compared with "healthy controls" and those with treated hypertension, respectively. Compared with "healthy controls" both those with treated (HR 1.29, 95% CI 1.03-1.60, p = 0.0267) and untreated hypertension (HR 1.69, 95% CI 1.19-2.40, p = 0.0032) had greater non-AD risk, but there was no difference between the treated and untreated groups. Baseline diastolic BP had a significant U-shaped relationship ( p = 0.0227) with non-AD risk in an analysis restricted to those with 5-year follow-up, but otherwise there was no significant relationship between baseline BP and either AD or non-AD risk., Discussion: Antihypertensive use was associated with decreased AD but not non-AD risk throughout late life. This suggests that treating hypertension throughout late life continues to be crucial in AD risk mitigation. A single measure of BP was not associated with AD risk, but DBP may have a U-shaped relationship with non-AD risk over longer periods in late life.- Published
- 2024
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16. Reproductive hormones in relation to white matter hyperintensity volumes among midlife women.
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Thurston RC, Chang Y, Wu M, Harrison EM, Aizenstein HJ, Derby CA, Barinas-Mitchell E, and Maki PM
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- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, Brain diagnostic imaging, Brain pathology, White Matter diagnostic imaging, White Matter pathology, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Estradiol blood, Follicle Stimulating Hormone blood, Estrone blood
- Abstract
Introduction: Although reproductive hormones are implicated in cerebral small vessel disease in women, few studies consider measured hormones in relation to white matter hyperintensity volume (WMHV), a key indicator of cerebral small vessel disease. Even fewer studies consider estrone (E1), the primary postmenopausal estrogen, or follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH), an indicator of ovarian age. We tested associations of estradiol (E2), E1, and FSH to WMHV among women., Methods: Two hundred twenty-two women (mean age = 59) underwent hormone assays (E1, E2, FSH) and 3T brain magnetic resonance imaging. Associations of hormones to WMHV were tested with linear regression., Results: Higher E2 (B[standard error (SE)] = -0.17[0.06], P = 0.008) and E1 (B[SE] = -0.26[0.10], P = 0.007) were associated with lower whole-brain WMHV, and higher FSH (B[SE] = 0.26[0.07], P = 0.0005) with greater WMHV (covariates age, race, education). When additionally controlling for cardiovascular disease risk factors, associations of E1 and FSH to WMHV remained., Discussion: Reproductive hormones, particularly E1 and FSH, are important to women's cerebrovascular health., Highlights: Despite widespread belief that sex hormones are important to women's brain health, little work has considered how these hormones in women relate to white matter hyperintensities (WMH), a major indicator of cerebral small vessel disease. We considered relations of estradiol (E2), estrone (E1), and follicle-stimulating hormone (FSH) to WMH in midlife women. Higher E2 and E1 were associated with lower whole-brain WMH volume (WMHV), and higher FSH with higher whole-brain WMHV. Associations of E1 and FSH, but not E2, to WMHV persisted with adjustment for cardiovascular disease risk factors. Findings underscore the importance of E2 and FSH to women's cerebrovascular health., (© 2024 The Author(s). Alzheimer's & Dementia published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Alzheimer's Association.)
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- 2024
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17. Endogenous estrogens and brain activation during verbal memory encoding and recognition in the postmenopause.
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Schroeder RA, Thurston RC, Wu M, Aizenstein HJ, Derby CA, and Maki PM
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Objective: Determine associations of endogenous estrogens with memory systems in the postmenopausal brain and evaluate clinical significance., Study Design: In the MsBrain cohort (n=199, mean age 59.3+3.9 years, 83.9% white), we examined the cross-sectional association of serum estradiol and estrone, measured using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS), during a functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) task of word encoding and recognition. To characterize the clinical significance of those associations, we examined the magnitude of activation in relation to a neuropsychological measures of memory and affect., Results: Endogenous estradiol was positively associated with activation in temporal and frontal cortices during encoding and negatively associated with one prefrontal region during recognition (p<.05). Activation in the left inferior frontal gyrus was associated with memory performance (β(SE)= 0.004(0.002), p<.05), and anxiety (β(SE)= -0.100(0.050), p<.05). The left middle frontal gyrus was associated with memory performance (β(SE)= 0.006(0.002), p<.01), depression, and anxiety. The left superior temporal gyrus (STG) was associated with depression (β(SE)= -0.083(0.036), p<.05) and anxiety (β(SE)= -0.134(0.058), p<.05). Estrone was positively associated with activation in a range of brain areas including bilateral STG and right superior frontal gyrus during encoding (p<.05). Activation of the left insula an precental gyrus were associated with symptoms of depression and anxiety. None related to memory., Conclusion: The function of brain areas critical to memory performance varies with estrogen levels in the postmenopause, even though those levels are low. Higher levels of estradiol may facilitate memory performance through enhanced function of temporal and frontal cortices during encoding of verbal material., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Endocrine Society. All rights reserved. For commercial re-use, please contact reprints@oup.com for reprints and translation rights for reprints. All other permissions can be obtained through our RightsLink service via the Permissions link on the article page on our site—for further information please contact journals.permissions@oup.com. See the journal About page for additional terms.)
- Published
- 2024
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18. Associations of endogenous estrogens, plasma Alzheimer's disease biomarkers, and APOE4 carrier status on regional brain volumes in postmenopausal women.
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Wugalter KA, Schroeder RA, Thurston RC, Wu M, Aizenstein HJ, Cohen AD, Kamboh MI, Karikari TK, Derby CA, and Maki PM
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Background: Women carrying the APOE4 allele are at greater risk of developing Alzheimer's disease (AD) from ages 65-75 years compared to men. To better understand the elevated risk conferred by APOE4 carrier status among midlife women, we investigated the separate and interactive associations of endogenous estrogens, plasma AD biomarkers, and APOE4 carrier status on regional brain volumes in a sample of late midlife postmenopausal women., Methods: Participants were enrolled in MsBrain, a cohort study of postmenopausal women ( n = 171, mean age = 59.4 years, mean MoCA score = 26.9; race = 83.2% white, APOE4 carriers = 40). Serum estrone (E1) and estradiol (E2) levels were assessed using liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry. APOE genotype was determined using TaqMan SNP genotyping assays. Plasma AD biomarkers were measured using single molecule array technology. Cortical volume was measured and segmented by FreeSurfer software using individual T1w MPRAGE images. Multiple linear regression models were conducted to determine whether separate and interactive associations between endogenous estrogen levels, plasma AD biomarkers (Aβ42/Aβ40, Aβ42/p-tau181), and APOE4 carrier status predict regional brain volume (21 regions per hemisphere, selected a priori ); and, whether significant interactive associations between estrogens and AD biomarkers on brain volume differed by APOE4 carrier status., Results: There was no main effect of APOE4 carrier status on regional brain volumes, endogenous estrogen levels, or plasma AD biomarkers. Estrogens did not associate with regional brain volumes, except for positive associations with left caudal middle frontal gyrus and fusiform volumes. The interactive association of estrogens and APOE4 carrier status on brain volume was not significant for any region. The interactive association of estrogens and plasma AD biomarkers predicted brain volume of several regions. Higher E1 and E2 were more strongly associated with greater regional brain volumes among women with a poorer AD biomarker profile (lower Aβ42/40, lower Aβ42/p-tau181 ratios). In APOE4 -stratified analyses, these interactions were driven by non- APOE4 carriers., Conclusion: We demonstrate that the brain volumes of postmenopausal women with poorer AD biomarker profiles benefit most from higher endogenous estrogen levels. These findings are driven by non- APOE4 carriers, suggesting that APOE4 carriers may be insensitive to the favorable effects of estrogens on brain volume in the postmenopause., Competing Interests: RT reported receiving personal fees from Astellas Pharma, Bayer, Hello Therapeutics, Happify Health, and Vira Health outside the submitted work. HA reported receiving personal fees from Eisai outside the submitted work. PM reported receiving personal fees from Astellas Pharma, Bayer, Estrigenix, Alloy, and MidiHealth outside the submitted work. The remaining authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2024 Wugalter, Schroeder, Thurston, Wu, Aizenstein, Cohen, Kamboh, Karikari, Derby and Maki.)
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- 2024
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19. Elevated Blood Homocysteine Increases the Risk of Incident Motoric Cognitive Risk Syndrome: A Two-Cohort Study.
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Cotton K, Ayers E, Jin Y, Beauchet O, Derby CA, Lipton RB, Katz M, Galery K, Gaudreau P, and Verghese J
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- Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Risk Factors, Incidence, Cohort Studies, Longitudinal Studies, Proportional Hazards Models, Syndrome, Aged, 80 and over, Quebec epidemiology, Cognitive Dysfunction blood, Cognitive Dysfunction epidemiology, Homocysteine blood
- Abstract
Background: Motoric Cognitive Risk (MCR) syndrome, a predementia syndrome characterized by cognitive complaints and slow gait, may have an underlying vascular etiology. Elevated blood levels of homocysteine, a known vascular risk factor, have been linked to physical and cognitive decline in older adults, though the relationship with MCR is unknown. We aimed to identify the association between homocysteine and MCR risk., Methods: We examined the association between baseline homocysteine levels and incident MCR using Cox proportional hazard models in 1826 community-dwelling older adults (55% women) from 2 cohorts (Einstein Aging Study [EAS] and Quebec Longitudinal Study on Nutrition and Successful Aging [NuAge]). We calculated hazard ratios (HR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI), for each cohort as well as stratified by sex and vascular disease/risk factors., Results: Median follow-up time was 2.2 years in EAS and 3.0 years in NuAge. Individuals with elevated baseline homocysteine levels (>14 µmol/L) had a significantly higher risk of incident MCR compared to those with normal levels in NuAge (HR 1.41, 95% CI: 1.01-1.97, p = .04), after adjusting for covariates. Our exploratory stratified analyses found that these associations were significant only in men with vascular disease/risk factors., Conclusions: Higher blood homocysteine levels are associated with an increased risk of developing MCR in older adults, particularly in men with vascular disease or vascular risk factors., (© The Author(s) 2024. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. All rights reserved. For commercial re-use, please contact reprints@oup.com for reprints and translation rights for reprints. All other permissions can be obtained through our RightsLink service via the Permissions link on the article page on our site—for further information please contact journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2024
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20. Perceived but not objective measures of neighborhood safety and food environments are associated with longitudinal changes in processing speed among urban older adults.
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Hyun J, Lovasi GS, Katz MJ, Derby CA, Lipton RB, and Sliwinski MJ
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- Humans, Aged, Male, Female, Aged, 80 and over, Longitudinal Studies, Neighborhood Characteristics, Cognition physiology, Independent Living psychology, Processing Speed, Residence Characteristics, Urban Population, Safety
- Abstract
Background: Although a growing body of literature documents the importance of neighborhood effects on late-life cognition, little is known about the relative strength of objective and subjective neighborhood measures on late-life cognitive changes. This study examined effects of objective and subjective neighborhood measures in three neighborhood domains (neighborhood safety, physical disorder, food environments) on longitudinal changes in processing speed, an early marker of cognitive aging and impairment., Methods: The analysis sample included 306 community-dwelling older adults enrolled in the Einstein Aging Study (mean age = 77, age range = 70 to 91; female = 67.7%; non-Hispanic White: 45.1%, non-Hispanic Black: 40.9%). Objective and subjective measures of neighborhood included three neighborhood domains (i.e., neighborhood safety, physical disorder, food environments). Processing speed was assessed using a brief Symbol Match task (unit: second), administered on a smartphone device six times a day for 16 days and repeated annually for up to five years. Years from baseline was used as the within-person time index., Results: Results from mixed effects models showed that subjective neighborhood safety (β= -0.028) and subjective availability of healthy foods (β= -0.028) were significantly associated with less cognitive slowing over time. When objective and subjective neighborhood measures were simultaneously examined, subjective availability of healthy foods remained significant (β= -0.028) after controlling for objective availability of healthy foods. Associations of objective neighborhood crime and physical disorder with processing speed seemed to be confounded by individual-level race and socioeconomic status; after controlling for these confounders, none of objective neighborhood measures showed significant associations with processing speed., Conclusion: Subjective neighborhood safety and subjective availability of healthy foods, rather than objective measures, were associated with less cognitive slowing over time over a five-year period. Perception of one's neighborhood may be a more proximal predictor of cognitive health outcomes as it may reflect one's experiences in the environment. It would be important to improve our understanding of both objective and subjective neighborhood factors to improve cognitive health among older adults., (© 2024. The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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21. HDL-C criterion of the metabolic syndrome and future diabetes and atherosclerosis in midlife women: The SWAN Study.
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Wang Z, Barinas-Mitchell E, Brooks MM, Crawford SL, Leis AM, Derby CA, Thurston RC, Hedderson MM, Janssen I, Jackson EA, McConnell DS, and El Khoudary SR
- Abstract
Objective: High-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C) is one of 5 components [high blood pressure, glucose, triglycerides, waist circumference, low HDL-C], 3 of which, needed to diagnose metabolic syndrome (MetS). Evolving research shows that higher HDL-C is not necessarily cardioprotective in midlife women, supporting a need to re-evaluate HDL-C's contribution to risks related to MetS. We tested whether risk of future diabetes and higher carotid intima-media thickness (cIMT) differ by HDL-C status in midlife women diagnosed with MetS based on the other 4 components., Methods Midlife Women Were Classified Into 3 Groups: 1) no MetS, 2) MetS with HDL-C ≥ 50 mg/dL (MetS hiHDL), and 3) MetS with HDL-C < 50 mg/dL (MetS loHDL). cIMT was measured 13.8 ± 0.6 years post baseline. Incident diabetes was assessed yearly., Results: Among 2773 women (1350 (48 %) of them had cIMT), 2383 (86 %) had no MetS, 117 (4 %) had MetS hiHDL, 273 (10 %) had MetS loHDL. Compared with no MetS, both MetS- hiHDL and loHDL groups had higher cIMT and diabetes risk. Risk of having high cIMT did not differ between MetS loHDL vs. hiHDL groups. Adjusting for levels of MetS criteria other than HDL-C at baseline explained the associations of each of the two MetS groups with cIMT. Conversely, after adjustment, associations of MetS hiHDL and MetS loHDL with incident diabetes persisted., Conclusions: In midlife women, HDL-C status matters for predicting risk of incident diabetes but not higher cIMT beyond other MetS components., Competing Interests: We wish to draw the attention of the Editor to the following facts which may be considered as potential conflicts of interest and to significant financial contributions to this work. Dr. Rebecca Thurston is a consultant and advisor for Astellas Pharma, consultant and received travel support from Bayer, and on the medical advisory board for Hello Therapeutics. All other coauthors have nothing to disclose., (© 2024 The Author(s).)
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- 2024
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22. Lifestyle and incident dementia: A COSMIC individual participant data meta‐analysis.
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Van Asbroeck S, Köhler S, van Boxtel MPJ, Lipnicki DM, Crawford JD, Castro-Costa E, Lima-Costa MF, Blay SL, Shifu X, Wang T, Yue L, Lipton RB, Katz MJ, Derby CA, Guerchet M, Preux PM, Mbelesso P, Norton J, Ritchie K, Skoog I, Najar J, Sterner TR, Scarmeas N, Yannakoulia M, Dardiotis T, Rolandi E, Davin A, Rossi M, Gureje O, Ojagbemi A, Bello T, Kim KW, Han JW, Oh DJ, Trompet S, Gussekloo J, Riedel-Heller SG, Röhr S, Pabst A, Shahar S, Rivan NFM, Singh DKA, Jacobsen E, Ganguli M, Hughes T, Haan M, Aiello AE, Ding D, Zhao Q, Xiao Z, Narazaki K, Chen T, Chen S, Ng TP, Gwee X, Gao Q, Brodaty H, Trollor J, Kochan N, Lobo A, Santabárbara J, Gracia-Garcia P, Sachdev PS, and Deckers K
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Female, Risk Factors, Aged, Prospective Studies, Incidence, Dementia epidemiology, Life Style
- Abstract
Introduction: The LIfestyle for BRAin Health (LIBRA) index yields a dementia risk score based on modifiable lifestyle factors and is validated in Western samples. We investigated whether the association between LIBRA scores and incident dementia is moderated by geographical location or sociodemographic characteristics., Methods: We combined data from 21 prospective cohorts across six continents (N = 31,680) and conducted cohort-specific Cox proportional hazard regression analyses in a two-step individual participant data meta-analysis., Results: A one-standard-deviation increase in LIBRA score was associated with a 21% higher risk for dementia. The association was stronger for Asian cohorts compared to European cohorts, and for individuals aged ≤75 years (vs older), though only within the first 5 years of follow-up. No interactions with sex, education, or socioeconomic position were observed., Discussion: Modifiable risk and protective factors appear relevant for dementia risk reduction across diverse geographical and sociodemographic groups., Highlights: A two-step individual participant data meta-analysis was conducted. This was done at a global scale using data from 21 ethno-regionally diverse cohorts. The association between a modifiable dementia risk score and dementia was examined. The association was modified by geographical region and age at baseline. Yet, modifiable dementia risk and protective factors appear relevant in all investigated groups and regions., (© 2024 The Authors. Alzheimer's & Dementia published by Wiley Periodicals LLC on behalf of Alzheimer's Association.)
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- 2024
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23. Cardiovascular Health, Race, and Decline in Cognitive Function in Midlife Women: The Study of Women's Health Across the Nation.
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Janssen I, Powell LH, Dugan SA, Derby CA, and Kravitz HM
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- Adult, Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Age Factors, Cardiovascular Diseases ethnology, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases psychology, Chicago epidemiology, Cognitive Aging psychology, Heart Disease Risk Factors, Risk Factors, United States epidemiology, White, Black or African American psychology, Cognition physiology, Cognitive Dysfunction epidemiology, Cognitive Dysfunction ethnology, Cognitive Dysfunction physiopathology, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnosis, Memory, Short-Term physiology, White People statistics & numerical data, Women's Health ethnology
- Abstract
Background: Cognitive decline may progress for decades before dementia onset. Better cardiovascular health (CVH) has been related to less cognitive decline, but it is unclear whether this begins early, for all racial subgroups, and all domains of cognitive function. The purpose of this study was to determine the impact of CVH on decline in the 2 domains of cognition that decline first in White and Black women at midlife., Methods and Results: Subjects were 363 Black and 402 White women, similar in baseline age (mean±SD, 46.6±3.0 years) and education (15.7±2.0 years), from the Chicago site of the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation. Cognition, measured as processing speed and working memory, was assessed annually or biennially over a maximum of 20 years (mean±SD, 9.8±6.7 years). CVH was measured as Life's Essential 8 (blood pressure, body mass index, glucose, non-high-density lipoprotein cholesterol, smoking, physical activity, diet, sleep). Hierarchical linear mixed models identified predictors of cognitive decline with progressive levels of adjustment. There was a decline in processing speed that was explained by race, age, and the 3-way interaction of race, CVH, and time ( F
1,4308 =8.8, P =0.003). CVH was unrelated to decline in White women but in Black women poorer CVH was associated with greater decline. Working memory did not decline in the total cohort, by race, or by CVH., Conclusions: In midlife Black women, CVH promotion may be a target for preventing the beginnings of cognitive decline, thereby enhancing independent living with aging.- Published
- 2024
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24. Neighborhood physical environments and change in cardiometabolic risk factors over 14 years in the study of Women's health across the nation.
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Appelhans BM, Lange-Maia BS, Yeh C, Jackson EA, Schiff MD, Barinas-Mitchell E, Derby CA, Karvonen-Gutierrez CA, and Janssen I
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- Humans, Female, Middle Aged, United States, Neighborhood Characteristics, Blood Pressure physiology, Adult, Environment Design, Waist Circumference, Risk Factors, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Walking statistics & numerical data, Cardiometabolic Risk Factors, Women's Health, Residence Characteristics statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
Background: Neighborhood physical environments may influence cardiometabolic health, but prior studies have been inconsistent, and few included long follow-up periods., Methods: Changes in cardiometabolic risk factors were measured for up to 14 years in 2830 midlife women in the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation, a multi-ethnic/racial cohort of women from seven U.S. sites. Data on neighborhood food retail environments (modified Retail Food Environment Index) and walkability (National Walkability Index) were obtained for each woman's residence at each follow-up. Data on neighborhood access to green space, parks, and supermarkets were available for subsets (32-42%) of women. Models tested whether rates of change in cardiometabolic outcomes differed based on neighborhood characteristics, independent of sociodemographic and health-related covariates., Results: Living in more (vs. less) walkable neighborhoods was associated with favorable changes in blood pressure outcomes (SBP: -0.27 mmHg/year, p = 0.002; DBP: -0.22 mmHg/year, p < 0.0001; hypertension status: ratio of ORs = 0.79, p < 0.0001), and small declines in waist circumference (-0.09 cm/year, p = 0.03). Small-magnitude associations were also observed between low park access and greater increases in blood pressure outcomes (SBP: 0.37 mmHg/year, p = 0.003; DBP: 0.15 mmHg/year, p = 0.04; hypertension status: ratio of ORs = 1.16, p = .04), though associations involving DBP and hypertension were only present after adjustment for sociodemographic variables. Other associations were statistically unreliable or contrary to hypotheses., Conclusion: Neighborhood walkability may have a meaningful influence on trajectories of blood pressure outcomes in women from midlife to early older adulthood, suggesting the need to better understand how individuals interact with their neighborhood environments in pursuit of cardiometabolic health., Competing Interests: Declaration of competing interest The authors have no conflicts of interest to disclose., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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25. Menopausal vasomotor symptoms and plasma Alzheimer disease biomarkers.
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Thurston RC, Maki P, Chang Y, Wu M, Aizenstein HJ, Derby CA, and Karikari TK
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- Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Hot Flashes, Amyloid beta-Peptides, Sweating, Biomarkers, Estradiol, Menopause, Alzheimer Disease
- Abstract
Background: Identifying risk factors for Alzheimer disease in women is important as women compose two-thirds of individuals with Alzheimer disease. Previous work links vasomotor symptoms, the cardinal menopausal symptom, with poor memory performance and alterations in brain structure, function, and connectivity. These associations are evident when vasomotor symptoms are monitored objectively with ambulatory skin conductance monitors., Objective: This study aimed to determine whether vasomotor symptoms are associated with Alzheimer disease biomarkers., Study Design: Between 2017 and 2020, the MsBrain study enrolled 274 community-dwelling women aged 45 to 67 years who had a uterus and at least 1 ovary and were late perimenopausal or postmenopausal status. The key exclusion criteria included neurologic disorder, surgical menopause, and recent use of hormonal or nonhormonal vasomotor symptom treatment. Women underwent 24 hours of ambulatory skin conductance monitoring to assess vasomotor symptoms. Plasma concentrations of Alzheimer disease biomarkers, including amyloid β 42-to-amyloid β 40 ratio, phosphorylated tau (181 and 231), glial fibrillary acidic protein, and neurofilament light, were measured using a single-molecule array (Simoa) technology. Associations between vasomotor symptoms and Alzheimer disease biomarkers were assessed via linear regression models adjusted for age, race and ethnicity, education, body mass index, and apolipoprotein E4 status. Additional models adjusted for estradiol and sleep., Results: A total of 248 (mean age, 59.06 years; 81% White; 99% postmenopausal status) of enrolled MsBrain participants contributed data. Objectively assessed vasomotor symptoms occurring during sleep were associated with significantly lower amyloid β 42/amyloid β 40, (beta, -.0010 [standard error, .0004]; P=.018; multivariable), suggestive of greater brain amyloid β pathology. The findings remained significant after additional adjustments for estradiol and sleep., Conclusion: Nighttime vasomotor symptoms may be a marker of women at risk of Alzheimer disease. It is yet unknown if these associations are causal., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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26. Trajectories of Sleep Over Midlife and Incident Cardiovascular Disease Events in the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation.
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Thurston RC, Chang Y, Kline CE, Swanson LM, El Khoudary SR, Jackson EA, and Derby CA
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- Female, Humans, Snoring, Sleep, Women's Health, Sleep Initiation and Maintenance Disorders epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Cardiovascular Diseases diagnosis
- Abstract
Background: Up to 50% of women report sleep problems in midlife, and cardiovascular disease (CVD) is the leading cause of death in women. How chronic poor sleep exposure over decades of midlife is related to CVD risk in women is poorly understood. We tested whether trajectories of insomnia symptoms or sleep duration over midlife were related to subsequent CVD events among SWAN (Study of Women's Health Across the Nation) participants, whose sleep was assessed up to 16 times over 22 years., Methods: At baseline, SWAN participants (n=2964) were 42 to 52 years of age, premenopausal or early perimenopausal, not using hormone therapy, and free of CVD. They completed up to 16 visits, including questionnaires assessing insomnia symptoms (trouble falling asleep, waking up several times a night, or waking earlier than planned ≥3 times/week classified as insomnia), typical daily sleep duration, vasomotor symptoms, and depressive symptoms; anthropometric measurements; phlebotomy; and CVD event ascertainment (ie, fatal or nonfatal myocardial infarction, stroke, heart failure, revascularization). Sleep trajectories (ie, insomnia, sleep duration) were determined by means of group-based trajectory modeling. Sleep trajectories were tested in relation to CVD in Cox proportional hazards models (multivariable models: site, age, race and ethnicity, education, CVD risk factors averaged over visits; additional covariates: vasomotor symptoms, snoring, depression)., Results: Four trajectories of insomnia symptoms emerged: low insomnia symptoms (n=1142 [39% of women]), moderate insomnia symptoms decreasing over time (n=564 [19%]), low insomnia symptoms increasing over time (n=590 [20%]), and high insomnia symptoms that persisted (n=668 [23%]). Women with persistently high insomnia symptoms had higher CVD risk (hazard ratio, 1.71 [95% CI, 1.19, 2.46], P =0.004, versus low insomnia; multivariable). Three trajectories of sleep duration emerged: persistently short (~5 hours: n=363 [14%]), moderate (~6 hours: n=1394 [55%]), and moderate to long (~8 hours: n=760 [30%]). Women with persistent short sleep had marginally higher CVD risk (hazard ratio, 1.51 [95% CI, 0.98, 2.33], P =0.06, versus moderate; multivariable). Women who had both persistent high insomnia and short sleep had significantly elevated CVD risk (hazard ratio, 1.75 [95% CI, 1.03, 2.98], P =0.04, versus low insomnia and moderate or moderate to long sleep duration; multivariable). Relations of insomnia to CVD persisted when adjusting for vasomotor symptoms, snoring, or depression., Conclusions: Insomnia symptoms, when persistent over midlife or occurring with short sleep, are associated with higher CVD risk among women., Competing Interests: Disclosures Dr Thurston is a consultant and advisor for Astellas Pharma, a consultant for Bayer, and on the medical advisory board for Hello Therapeutics. The other authors have no conflicts to disclose.
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- 2024
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27. Does the Cognitive Change Index Predict Future Cognitive and Clinical Decline? Longitudinal Analysis in a Demographically Diverse Cohort.
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Nester CO, Gao Q, Katz MJ, Mogle JA, Wang C, Derby CA, Lipton RB, Saykin AJ, and Rabin LA
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- Humans, Female, Aged, Male, Neuropsychological Tests, Cognition, Aging, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnosis, Cognitive Dysfunction psychology, Cognition Disorders
- Abstract
Background: The Cognitive Change Index (CCI) is a widely-used measure of self-perceived cognitive ability and change. Unfortunately, it is unclear if the CCI predicts future cognitive and clinical decline., Objective: We evaluated baseline CCI to predict transition from normal cognition to cognitive impairment in nondemented older adults and in predementia groups including, subjective cognitive decline, motoric cognitive risk syndrome, and mild cognitive impairment. Different versions of the CCI were assessed to uncover any differential risk sensitivity. We also examined the effect of ethnicity/race on CCI., Methods: Einstein Aging Study participants (N = 322, Mage = 77.57±4.96, % female=67.1, Meducation = 15.06±3.54, % non-Hispanic white = 46.3) completed an expanded 40-item CCI version (CCI-40) and neuropsychological evaluation (including Clinical Dementia Rating Scale [CDR], Montreal Cognitive Assessment, and Craft Story) at baseline and annual follow-up (Mfollow - up=3.4 years). CCI-40 includes the original 20 items (CCI-20) and the first 12 memory items (CCI-12). Linear mixed effects models (LME) and generalized LME assessed the association of CCI total scores at baseline with rate of decline in neuropsychological tests and CDR., Results: In the overall sample and across predementia groups, the CCI was associated with rate of change in log odds on CDR, with higher CCI at baseline predicting faster increase in the odds of being impaired on CDR. The predictive validity of the CCI broadly held across versions (CCI-12, 20, 40) and ethnic/racial groups (non-Hispanic black and white)., Conclusions: Self-perception of cognitive change on the CCI is a useful marker of dementia risk in demographically/clinically diverse nondemented samples. All CCI versions successfully predicted decline.
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- 2024
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28. Six multidimensional sleep health facets in older adults identified with factor analysis of actigraphy: Results from the Einstein Aging Study.
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Ji L, Wallace ML, Master L, Schade MM, Shen Y, Derby CA, and Buxton OM
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- Female, Humans, Aged, Male, Polysomnography, Rest, Aging, Actigraphy methods, Sleep
- Abstract
Objectives: The concept of multi-dimensional sleep health, originally based on self-report, was recently extended to actigraphy in older adults, yielding five components, but without a hypothesized rhythmicity factor. The current study extends prior work using a sample of older adults with a longer period of actigraphy follow-up, which may facilitate observation of the rhythmicity factor., Methods: Wrist actigraphy measures of participants (N = 289, M
age = 77.2 years, 67% females; 47% White, 40% Black, 13% Hispanic/Others) over 2 weeks were used in exploratory factor analysis to determine factor structures, followed by confirmatory factor analysis on a different subsample. The utility of this approach was demonstrated by associations with global cognitive performance (Montreal Cognitive Assessment)., Results: Exploratory factor analysis identified six factors: Regularity: standard deviations of four sleep measures: midpoint, sleep onset time, night total sleep time (TST), and 24-hour TST; Alertness/Sleepiness (daytime): amplitude, napping (mins and #/day); Timing: sleep onset, midpoint, wake-time (of nighttime sleep); up-mesor, acrophase, down-mesor; Efficiency: sleep maintenance efficiency, wake after sleep onset; Duration: night rest interval(s), night TST, 24-hour rest interval(s), 24-hour TST; Rhythmicity (pattern across days): mesor, alpha, and minimum. Greater sleep efficiency was associated with better Montreal Cognitive Assessment performance (β [95% confidence interval] = 0.63 [0.19, 1.08])., Conclusions: Actigraphic records over 2 weeks revealed that Rhythmicity may be an independent factor in sleep health. Facets of sleep health can facilitate dimension reduction, be considered predictors of health outcomes, and be potential targets for sleep interventions., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflict of Interest The authors report no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2023 National Sleep Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)- Published
- 2023
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29. Use of Antihypertensives, Blood Pressure, and Estimated Risk of Dementia in Late Life: An Individual Participant Data Meta-Analysis.
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Lennon MJ, Lam BCP, Lipnicki DM, Crawford JD, Peters R, Schutte AE, Brodaty H, Thalamuthu A, Rydberg-Sterner T, Najar J, Skoog I, Riedel-Heller SG, Röhr S, Pabst A, Lobo A, De-la-Cámara C, Lobo E, Bello T, Gureje O, Ojagbemi A, Lipton RB, Katz MJ, Derby CA, Kim KW, Han JW, Oh DJ, Rolandi E, Davin A, Rossi M, Scarmeas N, Yannakoulia M, Dardiotis T, Hendrie HC, Gao S, Carrière I, Ritchie K, Anstey KJ, Cherbuin N, Xiao S, Yue L, Li W, Guerchet MM, Preux PM, Aboyans V, Haan MN, Aiello AE, Ng TP, Nyunt MSZ, Gao Q, Scazufca M, and Sachdev PSS
- Subjects
- Humans, Female, Aged, Male, Blood Pressure, Antihypertensive Agents therapeutic use, Longitudinal Studies, Hypertension drug therapy, Hypertension epidemiology, Dementia epidemiology
- Abstract
Importance: The utility of antihypertensives and ideal blood pressure (BP) for dementia prevention in late life remains unclear and highly contested., Objectives: To assess the associations of hypertension history, antihypertensive use, and baseline measured BP in late life (age >60 years) with dementia and the moderating factors of age, sex, and racial group., Data Source and Study Selection: Longitudinal, population-based studies of aging participating in the Cohort Studies of Memory in an International Consortium (COSMIC) group were included. Participants were individuals without dementia at baseline aged 60 to 110 years and were based in 15 different countries (US, Brazil, Australia, China, Korea, Singapore, Central African Republic, Republic of Congo, Nigeria, Germany, Spain, Italy, France, Sweden, and Greece)., Data Extraction and Synthesis: Participants were grouped in 3 categories based on previous diagnosis of hypertension and baseline antihypertensive use: healthy controls, treated hypertension, and untreated hypertension. Baseline systolic BP (SBP) and diastolic BP (DBP) were treated as continuous variables. Reporting followed the Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Review and Meta-Analyses of Individual Participant Data reporting guidelines., Main Outcomes and Measures: The key outcome was all-cause dementia. Mixed-effects Cox proportional hazards models were used to assess the associations between the exposures and the key outcome variable. The association between dementia and baseline BP was modeled using nonlinear natural splines. The main analysis was a partially adjusted Cox proportional hazards model controlling for age, age squared, sex, education, racial group, and a random effect for study. Sensitivity analyses included a fully adjusted analysis, a restricted analysis of those individuals with more than 5 years of follow-up data, and models examining the moderating factors of age, sex, and racial group., Results: The analysis included 17 studies with 34 519 community dwelling older adults (20 160 [58.4%] female) with a mean (SD) age of 72.5 (7.5) years and a mean (SD) follow-up of 4.3 (4.3) years. In the main, partially adjusted analysis including 14 studies, individuals with untreated hypertension had a 42% increased risk of dementia compared with healthy controls (hazard ratio [HR], 1.42; 95% CI 1.15-1.76; P = .001) and 26% increased risk compared with individuals with treated hypertension (HR, 1.26; 95% CI, 1.03-1.53; P = .02). Individuals with treated hypertension had no significant increased dementia risk compared with healthy controls (HR, 1.13; 95% CI, 0.99-1.28; P = .07). The association of antihypertensive use or hypertension status with dementia did not vary with baseline BP. There was no significant association of baseline SBP or DBP with dementia risk in any of the analyses. There were no significant interactions with age, sex, or racial group for any of the analyses., Conclusions and Relevance: This individual patient data meta-analysis of longitudinal cohort studies found that antihypertensive use was associated with decreased dementia risk compared with individuals with untreated hypertension through all ages in late life. Individuals with treated hypertension had no increased risk of dementia compared with healthy controls.
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- 2023
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30. The quantity and quality of cardiovascular fat at mid-life and future cognitive performance among women: The SWAN cardiovascular fat ancillary study.
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Qi M, Janssen I, Barinas-Mitchell E, Budoff M, Brooks MM, Karlamangla AS, Derby CA, Chang CH, Shields KJ, and El Khoudary SR
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- Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Adipose Tissue diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Introduction: Cardiovascular fat is a novel risk factor that may link to dementia. Fat volume and radiodensity are measurements of fat quantity and quality, respectively. Importantly, high fat radiodensity could indicate healthy or adverse metabolic processes., Methods: The associations of cardiovascular fat (including epicardial, paracardial, and thoracic perivascular adipose tissue [PVAT]) quantity and quality assessed at mean age of 51 with subsequent cognitive performance measured repeatedly over 16 years of follow-up were examined using mixed models among 531 women., Results: Higher thoracic PVAT volume was associated with a higher future episodic memory (β[standard error (SE)] = 0.08 [0.04], P = 0.033), while higher thoracic PVAT radiodensity with lower future episodic (β[SE] = -0.06 [0.03], P = 0.045) and working (β[SE] = -0.24 [0.08], P = 0.003) memories. The latter association is prominent at higher volume of thoracic PVAT., Discussion: Mid-life thoracic PVAT may have a distinct contribution to future cognition possibly due to its distinct adipose tissue type (brown fat) and anatomical proximity to the brain circulation., Highlights: Higher mid-life thoracic perivascular adipose tissue (thoracic PVAT) volume is related to a better future episodic memory in women. Higher mid-life thoracic PVAT radiodensity is related to worse future working and episodic memories. Negative association of high thoracic PVAT radiodensity with working memory is prominent at higher thoracic PVAT volume. Mid-life thoracic PVAT is linked to future memory loss, an early sign of Alzheimer's disease. Mid-life women's epicardial and paracardial fat are not related to future cognition., (© 2023 the Alzheimer's Association.)
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- 2023
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31. Carotid intima media thickness and white matter hyperintensity volume among midlife women.
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Thurston RC, Wu M, Barinas-Mitchell E, Chang Y, Aizenstein H, Derby CA, and Maki PM
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- Humans, Female, Carotid Intima-Media Thickness, Apolipoprotein E4, Risk Factors, White Matter diagnostic imaging, White Matter pathology, Carotid Artery Diseases pathology
- Abstract
Introduction: Carotid atherosclerosis may be associated with brain white matter hyperintensities (WMH). Few studies consider women at midlife, a critical time for women's cardiovascular and brain health. We tested the hypothesis that higher carotid intima media thickness (IMT) would be associated with greater WMH volume (WMHV) among midlife women. We explored interactions by apolipoprotein E (APOE) ε4 status., Methods: Two hundred thirty-nine women aged 45 to 67 underwent carotid artery ultrasound, phlebotomy, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). One hundred seventy participants had undergone an ultrasound 5 years earlier., Results: Higher IMT was associated with greater whole brain (B[standard error (SE)] = 0.77 [.31], P = 0.01; multivariable) and periventricular (B[SE] = 0.80 [.30], P = 0.008; multivariable) WMHV. Associations were observed for IMT assessed contemporaneously with the MRI and 5 years prior to the MRI. Associations were strongest for APOE ε4-positive women., Discussion: Among midlife women, higher IMT was associated with greater WMHV. Vascular risk is critical to midlife brain health, particularly for APOE ε4-positive women., (© 2023 the Alzheimer's Association.)
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- 2023
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32. Availability of healthy foods, fruit and vegetable consumption, and cognition among urban older adults.
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Hyun J, Katz MJ, Derby CA, Roque N, Muñoz E, Sliwinski MJ, Lovasi GS, and Lipton RB
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- Humans, Aged, Access to Healthy Foods, Cognition, Health Behavior, Vegetables, Fruit
- Abstract
Background: . Although prior studies have examined the associations between neighborhood characteristics and cognitive health, little is known about whether local food environments, which are critical for individuals' daily living, are associated with late-life cognition. Further, little is known about how local environments may shape individuals' health-related behaviors and impact cognitive health. The aim of this study is to examine whether objective and subjective measures of healthy food availability are associated with ambulatory cognitive performance and whether behavioral and cardiovascular factors mediate these associations among urban older adults., Methods: . The sample consisted of systematically recruited, community-dwelling older adults (N = 315, mean age = 77.5, range = 70-91) from the Einstein Aging Study. Objective availability of healthy foods was defined as density of healthy food stores. Subjective availability of healthy foods and fruit/vegetable consumption were assessed using self-reported questionnaires. Cognitive performance was assessed using smartphone-administered cognitive tasks that measured processing speed, short-term memory binding, and spatial working memory performance 6 times a day for 14 days., Results: . Results from multilevel models showed that subjective availability of healthy foods, but not objective food environments, was associated with better processing speed (estimate= -0.176, p = .003) and more accurate memory binding performance (estimate = 0.042, p = .012). Further, 14~16% of the effects of subjective availability of healthy foods on cognition were mediated through fruit and vegetable consumption., Conclusions: . Local food environments seem to be important for individuals' dietary behavior and cognitive health. Specifically, subjective measures of food environments may better reflect individuals' experiences regarding their local food environments not captured by objective measures. Future policy and intervention strategies will need to include both objective and subjective food environment measures in identifying impactful target for intervention and evaluating effectiveness of policy changes., (© 2023. The Author(s).)
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- 2023
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33. Sleep timing, sleep regularity, and psychological health in early late life women: Findings from the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (SWAN).
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Swanson LM, Hood MM, Hall MH, Avis NE, Joffe H, Colvin A, Ruppert K, Kravitz HM, Neal-Perry G, Derby CA, Hess R, and Harlow SD
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- Female, Humans, Aged, Cross-Sectional Studies, Circadian Rhythm, Actigraphy, Women's Health, Sleep
- Abstract
Objectives: To examine the associations of actigraphy-assessed sleep timing and regularity with psychological health in early late life women, whose circadian rhythms may be impacted by aging., Design: Cross-sectional., Participants: A racially/ethnically diverse sample of 1197 community-dwelling women (mean age 65 years) enrolled in the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation., Measures: Actigraphy-assessed sleep measures included timing (mean midpoint from sleep onset to wake-up) and regularity (standard deviation of midpoint in hours). Psychological health measures included a composite well-being score, the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale, and the Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 Scale. Linear and logistic regression models, adjusted for covariates (including sleep duration), tested associations between sleep and psychological health measures., Results: After covariate adjustment, a sleep midpoint outside of 2:00-4: 00 AM was significantly associated with depressive symptoms (β = 0.88, 95% CI = 0.06, 1.70) and scoring above the cut-point for clinically significant depressive symptoms (OR = 1.72, 95% CI = 1.15, 2.57). Sleep irregularity was significantly associated with lower psychological well-being (β = -0.18, 95% CI = -0.33, -0.03), depressive (β = 1.36, 95% CI = 0.29, 2.44) and anxiety (β = 0.93, 95% CI = 0.40, 1.46) symptoms, and scoring above the cut-point for clinically significant depressive (OR = 1.68, 95% CI = 1.01, 2.79) and anxiety (OR = 1.62, 95% CI = 1.07, 2.43) symptoms., Conclusion: Above and beyond sleep duration, a sleep midpoint outside of 2:00-4:00 AM was associated with depressive symptoms while sleep irregularity was associated with multiple psychological health domains in late life women., Competing Interests: Declaration of conflicts of interest The authors have declared no conflicts of interest., (Copyright © 2022 National Sleep Foundation. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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34. Discrimination and Education Quality Moderate the Association of Sleep With Cognitive Function in Older Black Adults: Results From the Einstein Aging Study.
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Ji L, Zhaoyang R, Jiao JL, Schade MM, Bertisch S, Derby CA, Buxton OM, and Gamaldo AA
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- Male, Humans, Aged, Female, Cross-Sectional Studies, Aging psychology, Cognition, Sleep, Cognitive Dysfunction
- Abstract
Objectives: Heterogeneity among Black adults' experiences of discrimination and education quality independently influence cognitive function and sleep, and may also influence the extent to which sleep is related to cognitive function. We investigated the effect of discrimination on the relationship between objective sleep characteristics and cognitive function in older Black adults with varying education quality., Method: Cross-sectional analyses include Black participants in the Einstein Aging Study (N = 104, mean age = 77.2 years, 21% males). Sleep measures were calculated from wrist actigraphy (15.4 ± 1.3 days). Mean ambulatory cognitive function (i.e., spatial working memory, processing speed/visual attention, and short-term memory binding) was assessed with validated smartphone-based cognitive tests (6 daily). A modified Williams Everyday Discrimination Scale measured discriminatory experiences. Linear regression, stratified by reading literacy (an indicator of education quality), was conducted to investigate whether discrimination moderated associations between sleep and ambulatory cognitive function for individuals with varying reading literacy levels. Models controlled for age, income, sleep-disordered breathing, and sex assigned at birth., Results: Higher reading literacy was associated with better cognitive performance. For participants with both lower reading literacy and more discriminatory experiences, longer mean sleep time was associated with slower processing speed, and lower sleep quality was associated with worse working memory. Later sleep midpoint and longer nighttime sleep were associated with worse spatial working memory for participants with low reading literacy, independent of their discriminatory experiences., Discussion: Sociocultural factors (i.e., discrimination and education quality) can further explain the association between sleep and cognitive functioning and cognitive impairment risk among older Black adults., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2023
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35. Psychosocial impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on women with trauma histories: Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (SWAN).
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Jakubowski KP, Koffer RE, Matthews KA, Burnett-Bowie SM, Derby CA, Yu EW, Green R, and Thurston RC
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- Female, Humans, Child, Aged, Pandemics, Longitudinal Studies, Women's Health, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic, COVID-19, Intimate Partner Violence psychology
- Abstract
Older adults, particularly those with trauma histories, may be vulnerable to adverse psychosocial outcomes during the COVID-19 pandemic. We tested associations between prepandemic childhood abuse or intimate partner violence (IPV) and elevated depressive, anxiety, conflict, and sleep symptoms during the pandemic among aging women. Women (N = 582, age: 65-77 years) from three U.S. sites (Pittsburgh, Boston, Newark) of the longitudinal Study of Women's Health Across the Nation (SWAN) reported pandemic-related psychosocial impacts from June 2020-March 2021. Prepandemic childhood abuse; physical/emotional IPV; social functioning; physical comorbidities; and depressive, anxiety, and sleep symptoms were drawn from SWAN assessments between 2009 and 2017. There were no measures of prepandemic conflict. In total, 47.7% and 35.3% of women, respectively, reported childhood abuse or IPV. Using logistic regression models adjusted for age; race/ethnicity; education; site; prepandemic social functioning and physical comorbidities; and, in respective models, prepandemic depressive, anxiety, or sleep symptoms, childhood abuse predicted elevated anxiety symptoms, OR = 1.67, 95% CI [1.10, 2.54]; household conflict, OR = 2.19, 95% CI [1.32, 3.61]; and nonhousehold family conflict, OR = 2.14, 95% CI [1.29, 3.55]. IPV predicted elevated sleep problems, OR = 1.63, 95% CI [1.07, 2.46], and household conflict, OR = 1.96, 95% CI [1.20, 3.21]. No associations emerged for depressive symptoms after adjusting for prepandemic depression. Aging women with interpersonal trauma histories reported worse anxiety, sleep, and conflict during the COVID-19 pandemic than those without. Women's trauma histories and prepandemic symptoms are critical to understanding the psychosocial impacts of the pandemic., (© 2022 International Society for Traumatic Stress Studies.)
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- 2023
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36. Menopausal Vasomotor Symptoms and White Matter Hyperintensities in Midlife Women.
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Thurston RC, Wu M, Chang YF, Aizenstein HJ, Derby CA, Barinas-Mitchell EA, and Maki P
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- Female, Humans, Brain diagnostic imaging, Menopause physiology, Polysomnography, Women's Health, Middle Aged, Aged, White Matter diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Background and Objectives: The menopause transition is increasingly recognized as a time of importance for women's brain health. A growing body of work indicates that the classic menopausal symptom, vasomotor symptom (VMS), may be associated with poorer cardiovascular health. Other work links VMS to poorer cognition. We investigate whether VMS, when rigorously assessed using physiologic measures, are associated with greater white matter hyperintensity volume (WMHV) among midlife women. We consider a range of potential explanatory factors in these associations and explore whether VMS are associated with the spatial distribution of WMHV., Methods: Women aged 45-67 years and free of hormone therapy underwent 24 hours of physiologic VMS monitoring (sternal skin conductance), actigraphy assessment of sleep, physical measures, phlebotomy, and 3 Tesla neuroimaging. Associations between VMS (24-hour, wake, and sleep VMS, with wake and sleep intervals defined by actigraphy) and whole brain WMHV were considered in linear regression models adjusted for age, race, education, smoking, body mass index, blood pressure, insulin resistance, and lipids. Secondary models considered WMHV in specific brain regions (deep, periventricular, frontal, temporal, parietal, and occipital) and additional covariates including sleep., Results: The study sample included 226 women. Physiologically assessed VMS were associated with greater whole brain WMHV in multivariable models, with the strongest associations observed for sleep VMS (24-hour VMS, B[SE] = 0.095 [0.045], p = 0.032; Wake VMS, B[SE] = 0.078 [0.046], p = 0.089, Sleep VMS, B[SE] = 0.173 [0.060], p = 0.004). Associations were not accounted for by additional covariates including actigraphy-assessed sleep (wake after sleep onset). When considering the spatial distribution of WMHV, sleep VMS were associated with both deep WMHV, periventricular WMHV, and frontal lobe WMHV., Discussion: VMS, particularly VMS occurring during sleep, were associated with greater WMHV. Identification of female-specific midlife markers of poor brain health later in life is critical to identify women who warrant early intervention and prevention. VMS have the potential to serve as female-specific midlife markers of brain health in women., (© 2022 American Academy of Neurology.)
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- 2023
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37. The independent associations of anti-Müllerian hormone and estradiol levels over the menopause transition with lipids/lipoproteins: The Study of Women's health Across the Nation.
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El Khoudary SR, Chen X, Qi M, Derby CA, Brooks MM, Thurston RC, Janssen I, Crawford S, Lee JS, Jackson EA, Chae CU, McConnell D, and Matthews KA
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- Female, Humans, Apolipoprotein A-I, Apolipoproteins B, Cholesterol, HDL, Cholesterol, LDL, Estradiol, Menopause, Triglycerides, Women's Health, Adult, Middle Aged, Anti-Mullerian Hormone, Lipoproteins
- Abstract
Background: The menopause transition (MT) is linked to adverse changes in lipids/lipoproteins. However, the related contributions of anti-Müllerian hormone (AMH) and estradiol (E2) are not clear., Objective: To evaluate the independent associations of premenopausal AMH and E2 levels and their changes with lipids/lipoproteins levels [total cholesterol (TC), triglyceride (TG), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol (LDL-C), high-density lipoprotein cholesterol (HDL-C), apolipoprotein B (apoB) and apolipoprotein A-1 (apoA-1)] over the MT., Methods: SWAN participants who transitioned to menopause without exogenous hormone use, hysterectomy, or bilateral oophorectomy with data available on both exposure and outcomes when they were premenopausal until the 1st visit postmenopausal were studied., Results: The study included 1,440 women (baseline-age:mean±SD=47.4±2.6) with data available from up to 9 visits (1997-2013). Lower premenopausal levels and greater declines in AMH were independently associated with greater TC and HDL-C, whereas lower premenopausal levels and greater declines in E2 were independently associated with greater TG and apo B and lower HDL-C. Greater declines in AMH were independently associated with greater apoA-1, and greater declines in E2 were independently associated with greater TC and LDL-C., Conclusions: AMH and E2 and their changes over the MT relate differently to lipids/lipoproteins profile in women during midlife. Lower premenopausal and/or greater declines in E2 over the MT were associated with an atherogenic lipid/lipoprotein profile. On the other hand, lower premenopausal AMH and/or greater declines in AMH over the MT were linked to higher apo A-1 and HDL-C; the later found previously to be related to a greater atherosclerotic risk after menopause., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest Samar R. El Khoudary: None, Xirun Chen: None, Meiyuzhen Qi: None, Carol Derby: None, Maria M. Brooks: DSMB member: Cerus Corporation, Rebecca C. Thurston: Consulting/Advisory Board: Astellas, Bayer, Happify Health, Vira Health, Imke Janssen: None, Sybil Crawford: None, Jennifer S. Lee: None, Elizabeth A. Jackson: research funding from NIH, and Amgen; editorial board membership: Circulation: Cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes; consulting: American College of Cardiology and McKesson, Inc.; Expert witness for DeBlase Brown Everly LLP.; and royalties from UpToDate, Claudia Chae: None, Dan McConnell: None, Karen A. Matthews: None, (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2023
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38. Dose-response relationship between late-life physical activity and incident dementia: A pooled analysis of 10 cohort studies of memory in an international consortium.
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Wu W, Ding D, Zhao Q, Xiao Z, Luo J, Ganguli M, Hughes TF, Jacobsen E, Haan MN, van Dang K, Lima-Costa MF, Blay SL, de Castro-Costa E, Ng TP, Gwee X, Gao Q, Gureje O, Ojagbemi A, Bello T, Shahar S, Ludin AFM, Rivan NFM, Scarmeas N, Anastasiou CA, Yannakoulia M, Brodaty H, Crawford JD, Lipton RB, Derby CA, Katz MJ, Lipnicki DM, and Sachdev PS
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- Humans, Aged, Cohort Studies, Proportional Hazards Models, Risk Factors, Dementia epidemiology
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Introduction: Though consistent evidence suggests that physical activity may delay dementia onset, the duration and amount of activity required remains unclear., Methods: We harmonized longitudinal data of 11,988 participants from 10 cohorts in eight countries to examine the dose-response relationship between late-life physical activity and incident dementia among older adults., Results: Using no physical activity as a reference, dementia risk decreased with duration of physical activity up to 3.1 to 6.0 hours/week (hazard ratio [HR] 0.88, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.67 to 1.15 for 0.1 to 3.0 hours/week; HR 0.68, 95% CI 0.52 to 0.89 for 3.1 to 6.0 hours/week), but plateaued with higher duration. For the amount of physical activity, a similar pattern of dose-response curve was observed, with an inflection point of 9.1 to 18.0 metabolic equivalent value (MET)-hours/week (HR 0.92, 95% CI 0.70 to 1.22 for 0.1 to 9.0 MET-hours/week; HR 0.70, 95% CI 0.53 to 0.93 for 9.1 to 18.0 MET-hours/week)., Discussion: This cross-national analysis suggests that performing 3.1 to 6.0 hours of physical activity and expending 9.1 to 18.0/MET-hours of energy per week may reduce dementia risk., (© 2022 the Alzheimer's Association.)
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- 2023
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39. Depressive symptoms mediate the relationship between diabetes and cognitive performance in a community-based sample of older adults.
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Hoogendoorn CJ, Qin J, Wang C, Roque N, Laurenceau JP, Katz MJ, Derby CA, Lipton RB, and Gonzalez JS
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- Aged, Cognition, Cohort Studies, Cross-Sectional Studies, Depression complications, Depression epidemiology, Humans, Cognitive Dysfunction complications, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnosis, Cognitive Dysfunction epidemiology, Diabetes Mellitus epidemiology, Diabetes Mellitus psychology
- Abstract
Aims: To evaluate whether diabetes and prediabetes are associated with impaired cognitive performance among older adults and examine depressive symptoms as a mediator., Methods: We used cross-sectional data from the Einstein Aging Study, a systematically recruited, community-based cohort study of diverse older adults (N = 794; Age Mean (SD) = 78.9 (5.3); 64.4% Non-Hispanic White, 28.7% Non-Hispanic Black, 5.7% Hispanic). Diabetes status was established via self-reported diagnosis, prescribed medications, and fasting blood glucose. Depressive symptoms were assessed using the Geriatric Depression Scale. Cognitive tests included Digit Symbol, Trails-B, Free Recall, Category Fluency, Boston Naming, and Block Design. Linear regression and mediation analyses were applied., Results: Compared to those without diabetes, diabetes was associated with worse performance on all cognitive tests (ps < 0.05), except Trails-B (p = 0.53), and increased depressive symptoms (p < 0.01). For diabetes, mediation via increased depressive symptoms was observed for Free Recall (p = 0.044), Category Fluency (p = 0.033), and Boston Naming (p = 0.048)., Conclusions: Diabetes was consistently associated with worse cognitive performance and increased depressive symptoms among this older cohort, while prediabetes was not. Mediation findings suggest depressive symptoms may be a biobehavioral pathway linking diabetes and cognition, though the temporal sequence is unclear. If causal, addressing both diabetes and depressive symptoms among older adults may protect cognitive function., (Copyright © 2022. Published by Elsevier Inc.)
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- 2022
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40. Menopause Is Associated with an Altered Gut Microbiome and Estrobolome, with Implications for Adverse Cardiometabolic Risk in the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos.
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Peters BA, Lin J, Qi Q, Usyk M, Isasi CR, Mossavar-Rahmani Y, Derby CA, Santoro N, Perreira KM, Daviglus ML, Kominiarek MA, Cai J, Knight R, Burk RD, and Kaplan RC
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- Female, Male, Humans, Public Health, Menopause, Gonadal Steroid Hormones, Hispanic or Latino, Gastrointestinal Microbiome, Cardiovascular Diseases
- Abstract
Menopause is a pivotal period during which loss of ovarian hormones increases cardiometabolic risk and may also influence the gut microbiome. However, the menopause-microbiome relationship has not been examined in a large study, and its implications for cardiometabolic disease are unknown. In the Hispanic Community Health Study/Study of Latinos, a population with high burden of cardiometabolic risk factors, shotgun metagenomic sequencing was performed on stool from 2,300 participants (295 premenopausal women, 1,027 postmenopausal women, and 978 men), and serum metabolomics was available on a subset. Postmenopausal women trended toward lower gut microbiome diversity and altered overall composition compared to premenopausal women, while differing less from men, in models adjusted for age and other demographic/behavioral covariates. Differentially abundant taxa for post- versus premenopausal women included Bacteroides sp. strain Ga6A1 , Prevotella marshii, and Sutterella wadsworthensis (enriched in postmenopause) and Escherichia coli -Shigella spp., Oscillibacter sp. strain KLE1745 , Akkermansia muciniphila, Clostridium lactatifermentans, Parabacteroides johnsonii, and Veillonella seminalis (depleted in postmenopause); these taxa similarly differed between men and women. Postmenopausal women had higher abundance of the microbial sulfate transport system and decreased abundance of microbial β-glucuronidase; these functions correlated with serum progestin metabolites, suggesting involvement of postmenopausal gut microbes in sex hormone retention. In postmenopausal women, menopause-related microbiome alterations were associated with adverse cardiometabolic profiles. In summary, in a large U.S. Hispanic/Latino population, menopause is associated with a gut microbiome more similar to that of men, perhaps related to the common condition of a low estrogen/progesterone state. Future work should examine similarity of results in other racial/ethnic groups. IMPORTANCE The menopausal transition, marked by declining ovarian hormones, is recognized as a pivotal period of cardiometabolic risk. Gut microbiota metabolically interact with sex hormones, but large population studies associating menopause with the gut microbiome are lacking. Our results from a large study of Hispanic/Latino women and men suggest that the postmenopausal gut microbiome in women is slightly more similar to the gut microbiome in men and that menopause depletes specific gut pathogens and decreases the hormone-related metabolic potential of the gut microbiome. At the same time, gut microbes may participate in sex hormone reactivation and retention in postmenopausal women. Menopause-related gut microbiome changes were associated with adverse cardiometabolic risk in postmenopausal women, indicating that the gut microbiome contributes to changes in cardiometabolic health during menopause.
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- 2022
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41. Infertility, recurrent pregnancy loss, and risk of stroke: pooled analysis of individual patient data of 618 851 women.
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Liang C, Chung HF, Dobson AJ, Hayashi K, van der Schouw YT, Kuh D, Hardy R, Derby CA, El Khoudary SR, Janssen I, Sandin S, Weiderpass E, and Mishra GD
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- Female, Humans, Pregnancy, Prospective Studies, Risk Factors, Stillbirth epidemiology, Abortion, Habitual epidemiology, Brain Ischemia, Infertility, Stroke epidemiology, Stroke etiology
- Abstract
Objective: To examine the associations of infertility, recurrent miscarriage, and stillbirth with the risk of first non-fatal and fatal stroke, further stratified by stroke subtypes., Design: Individual participant pooled analysis of eight prospective cohort studies., Setting: Cohort studies across seven countries (Australia, China, Japan, Netherlands, Sweden, the United Kingdom, and the United States) participating in the InterLACE (International Collaboration for a Life Course Approach to Reproductive Health and Chronic Disease Events) consortium, which was established in June 2012., Participants: 618 851 women aged 32.0-73.0 years at baseline with data on infertility, miscarriage, or stillbirth, at least one outcome event (non-fatal or fatal stroke), and information on covariates were included; 93 119 women were excluded. Of the participants, 275 863 had data on non-fatal and fatal stroke, 54 716 only had data on non-fatal stroke, and 288 272 only had data on fatal stroke., Main Outcome and Measures: Non-fatal strokes were identified through self-reported questionnaires, linked hospital data, or national patient registers. Fatal strokes were identified through death registry data., Results: The median follow-up for non-fatal stroke and fatal stroke was 13.0 years (interquartile range 12.0-14.0) and 9.4 years (7.6-13.0), respectively. A first non-fatal stroke was experienced by 9265 (2.8%) women and 4003 (0.7%) experienced a fatal stroke. Hazard ratios for non-fatal or fatal stroke were stratified by hypertension and adjusted for race or ethnicity, body mass index, smoking status, education level, and study. Infertility was associated with an increased risk of non-fatal stroke (hazard ratio 1.14, 95% confidence interval 1.08 to 1.20). Recurrent miscarriage (at least three) was associated with higher risk of non-fatal and fatal stroke (1.35, 1.27 to 1.44, and 1.82, 1.58 to 2.10, respectively). Women with stillbirth were at 31% higher risk of non-fatal stroke (1.31, 1.10 to 1.57) and women with recurrent stillbirth were at 26% higher risk of fatal stroke (1.26, 1.15 to 1.39). The increased risk of stroke (non-fatal or fatal) associated with infertility or recurrent stillbirths was mainly driven by a single stroke subtype (non-fatal ischaemic stroke and fatal haemorrhagic stroke), while the increased risk of stroke (non-fatal or fatal) associated with recurrent miscarriages was driven by both subtypes., Conclusion: A history of recurrent miscarriages and death or loss of a baby before or during birth could be considered a female specific risk factor for stroke, with differences in risk according to stroke subtypes. These findings could contribute to improved monitoring and stroke prevention for women with such a history., Competing Interests: Competing interests: All authors have completed the ICMJE uniform disclosure form at https://www.icmje.org/disclosure-of-interest/ and declare: support from the Australian National Health and Medical Research Council Centres of Research Excellence for the submitted work; no financial relationships with any organizations that might have an interest in the submitted work in the previous three years; no other relationships or activities that could appear to have influenced the submitted work., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
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- 2022
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42. Pain in midlife women: a growing problem in need of further research.
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Pavlović JM and Derby CA
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More than 10% of American adults experience some level of daily pain, and nearly 40 million (17.6%) experience episodes of severe pain annually. Women are particularly impacted by both episodic and chronic pain with higher prevalence and a greater level of pain-related disability compared to men. Midlife is a critical period for women during which the frequency of pain complaints begins to increase. Although pain is known to be influenced and controlled by sex hormones, it has not been widely recognized as a symptom of the menopausal transition outside of the menopause research community. The recent thematic series in this journal has specifically highlighted pain related conditions including rheumatoid arthritis, migraine and abdominal pain for which the significance among midlife women is not typically recognized. The studies presented in this thematic series present a small fraction of relevant, understudied questions regarding pain and its impact on women in midlife. Addressing the gaps in knowledge will require longitudinal studies that consider the emergence of pain symptomatology in relation to midlife trajectories of other symptoms and health determinants, as well as further study of new and emerging therapies., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
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- 2022
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43. Reliabilities of Intra-Individual Mean and Intra-Individual Variability of Self-Reported Pain Derived From Ecological Momentary Assessments: Results From the Einstein Aging Study.
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Hyun J, Qin J, Wang C, Katz MJ, Pavlovic JM, Derby CA, and Lipton RB
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Humans, Pain, Reproducibility of Results, Self Report, Aging, Ecological Momentary Assessment
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An individual's pain experiences vary substantially over time. Though variability in pain may be an important metric which usually predicts health consequences, research on the measurement of pain variability estimates is lacking among older adults. We aimed to examine the reliabilities of both intra-individual mean (IIM) and intra-individual variability (IIV) of pain assessed using ecological momentary assessments (EMA) among racially diverse, systematically recruited community dwelling cohort of older adults. Participants (N = 311, age = 70-91) completed a 14-day EMA protocol which included self-reports of pain intensity, pain interference with activities, and pain interference with concentration multiple times a day. Over a 2-week period, we found excellent reliabilities for both pain IIM (.99), and pain IIV (≥.90). We also found that we need 5 to 6 days to achieve good reliability (.8) for pain IIV, suggesting that a shorter protocol may be used to reduce participants' burden among the current sample, although caution is required when using this result to determine EMA study designs among different samples. Future studies are required to examine the associations of various EMA pain metrics with different health outcomes among older adults to facilitate the detection of underlying mechanisms linking pain to health as a prelude to interventions. PERSPECTIVE: Mean levels and variability in pain intensity, pain interference with activities, and pain interference with concentration can be reliably measured to be linked with various health outcomes in older adults. Future studies including these pain metrics will assess the natural history, the consequences, and effects of intervention of pain., (Copyright © 2021 United States Association for the Study of Pain, Inc. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
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- 2022
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44. Sexual assault and white matter hyperintensities among midlife women.
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Thurston RC, Jakubowski KP, Wu M, Aizenstein HJ, Chang Y, Derby CA, Koenen KC, Barinas-Mitchell E, and Maki PM
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- Cross-Sectional Studies, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Middle Aged, Dementia, Leukoaraiosis, Sex Offenses, White Matter diagnostic imaging
- Abstract
Traumatic experiences have been linked to poor mental and physical health. However, there has been little examination of their relationship to neuroimaging markers of cerebrovascular risk. White matter hyperintensities (WMHs) are markers of brain small vessel disease. WMHs can be detected decades before the onset of dementia and other disorders and can serve as early markers for these brain disorders. We tested whether traumatic experiences were associated with brain WMH volume among midlife women. In the MsBrain study, 145 women (mean age = 59 years) without cardiovascular disease, stroke, or dementia were recruited. Women completed questionnaires [trauma checklist, depression, post-traumatic stress measures]; physical measures [body mass index (BMI), blood pressure (BP)]; phlebotomy; actigraphy sleep measurement, and 3 Tesla magnetic resonance brain imaging for WMHs. Cross-sectional associations between traumatic experiences and WMH volume were assessed in linear regression models. Covariates were age, race/ethnicity, education, BMI, BP, lipids, preeclampsia, sleep, and additionally depressive and post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms. 68% of women endorsed at least one of the traumas assessed. The most common trauma was sexual assault (23% of women). Women with trauma exposure had greater WMH volume than women without trauma [B(SE) = .24 (.09), p = .01, multivariable]. The single trauma most associated with WMH was sexual assault [B(SE) = .25 (.11), p = .02, multivariable]. Results persisted adjusting for depressive or post-traumatic stress symptoms. A trauma history, particularly sexual assault, was associated with greater WMH volume controlling for covariates, including depressive and post-traumatic symptoms. Sexual assault may place women at risk for poor brain health., (© 2021. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.)
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- 2022
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45. Education, Occupational Complexity, and Incident Dementia: A COSMIC Collaborative Cohort Study.
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Hyun J, Hall CB, Katz MJ, Derby CA, Lipnicki DM, Crawford JD, Guaita A, Vaccaro R, Davin A, Kim KW, Han JW, Bae JB, Röhr S, Riedel-Heller S, Ganguli M, Jacobsen E, Hughes TF, Brodaty H, Kochan NA, Trollor J, Lobo A, Santabarbara J, Lopez-Anton R, Sachdev PS, and Lipton RB
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Female, Humans, Internationality, Male, Middle Aged, Risk Factors, Cognition, Dementia epidemiology, Educational Status, Occupations
- Abstract
Background: Education and occupational complexity are main sources of mental engagement during early life and adulthood respectively, but research findings are not conclusive regarding protective effects of these factors against late-life dementia., Objective: This project aimed to examine the unique contributions of education and occupational complexity to incident dementia, and to assess the mediating effects of occupational complexity on the association between education and dementia across diverse cohorts., Method: We used data from 10,195 participants (median baseline age = 74.1, range = 58∼103), representing 9 international datasets from 6 countries over 4 continents. Using a coordinated analysis approach, the accelerated failure time model was applied to each dataset, followed by meta-analysis. In addition, causal mediation analyses were performed., Result: The meta-analytic results indicated that both education and occupational complexity were independently associated with increased dementia-free survival time, with 28%of the effect of education mediated by occupational complexity. There was evidence of threshold effects for education, with increased dementia-free survival time associated with 'high school completion' or 'above high school' compared to 'middle school completion or below'., Conclusion: Using datasets from a wide range of geographical regions, we found that both early life education and adulthood occupational complexity were independently predictive of dementia. Education and occupational experiences occur during early life and adulthood respectively, and dementia prevention efforts could thus be made at different stages of the life course.
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- 2022
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46. Variability in Cognitive Performance on Mobile Devices Is Sensitive to Mild Cognitive Impairment: Results From the Einstein Aging Study.
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Cerino ES, Katz MJ, Wang C, Qin J, Gao Q, Hyun J, Hakun JG, Roque NA, Derby CA, Lipton RB, and Sliwinski MJ
- Abstract
Background and Objective: Within-person variability in cognitive performance has emerged as a promising indicator of cognitive health with potential to distinguish normative and pathological cognitive aging. We use a smartphone-based digital health approach with ecological momentary assessments (EMA) to examine differences in variability in performance among older adults with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and those who were cognitively unimpaired (CU). Method: A sample of 311 systematically recruited, community-dwelling older adults from the Einstein Aging Study (Mean age = 77.46 years, SD = 4.86, Range = 70-90; 67% Female; 45% Non-Hispanic White, 40% Non-Hispanic Black) completed neuropsychological testing, neurological assessments, and self-reported questionnaires. One hundred individuals met Jak/Bondi criteria for MCI. All participants performed mobile cognitive tests of processing speed, visual short-term memory binding, and spatial working memory on a smartphone device up to six times daily for 16 days, yielding up to 96 assessments per person. We employed heterogeneous variance multilevel models using log-linear prediction of residual variance to simultaneously assess cognitive status differences in mean performance, within-day variability, and day-to-day variability. We further tested whether these differences were robust to the influence of environmental contexts under which assessments were performed. Results: Individuals with MCI exhibited greater within-day variability than those who were CU on ambulatory assessments that measure processing speed ( p < 0.001) and visual short-term memory binding ( p < 0.001) performance but not spatial working memory. Cognitive status differences in day-to-day variability were present only for the measure of processing speed. Associations between cognitive status and within-day variability in performance were robust to adjustment for sociodemographic and contextual variables. Conclusion: Our smartphone-based digital health approach facilitates the ambulatory assessment of cognitive performance in older adults and the capacity to differentiate individuals with MCI from those who were CU. Results suggest variability in mobile cognitive performance is sensitive to MCI and exhibits dissociative patterns by timescale and cognitive domain. Variability in processing speed and visual short-term memory binding performance may provide specific detection of MCI. The 16-day smartphone-based EMA measurement burst offers novel opportunity to leverage digital technology to measure performance variability across frequent assessments for studying cognitive health and identifying early clinical manifestations of cognitive impairment., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2021 Cerino, Katz, Wang, Qin, Gao, Hyun, Hakun, Roque, Derby, Lipton and Sliwinski.)
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- 2021
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47. Patterns of menstrual cycle length over the menopause transition are associated with subclinical atherosclerosis after menopause.
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El Khoudary SR, Qi M, Chen X, Matthews K, Allshouse AA, Crawford SL, Derby CA, Thurston RC, Kazlauskaite R, Barinas-Mitchell E, and Santoro N
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- Ankle Brachial Index, Female, Humans, Menopause, Menstrual Cycle, Pulse Wave Analysis, Atherosclerosis epidemiology, Carotid Intima-Media Thickness
- Abstract
Objective: Longer menstrual cycles have been associated with greater risk of cardiovascular disease, supporting a contribution of abnormal ovarian function. We aimed to characterize trajectories of menstrual cycle length over the menopause transition (MT) and test whether these trajectories are associated with postmenopausal markers of subclinical atherosclerosis., Methods: Women from the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation Daily Hormone Study were included if they had an observed date of the final menstrual period (FMP), recorded cycle lengths from ≥2 annual menstrual cycles (mean±SD: 4.22 ± 1.91 cycles), and had measurements of postmenopausal carotid intima-media thickness (cIMT) and/or brachial-ankle pulse wave velocity (baPWV). Trajectories of cycle length over the MT were identified using group-based trajectory modeling and linked with cIMT and baPWV using linear regression., Results: We studied 428 women who had 1,808 cycles over the MT (45.1 ± 2.3 y old at baseline visit), and of whom 263 had cIMT, and 213 had baPWV measured postmenopausally (after 13.88 ± 0.42 and 15.25 ± 0.70 y since baseline visit, respectively). Three distinct trajectories of cycle length were identified: stable (no changes in cycle length over the MT among 62.1% of women), late increase (a late increase 2 y before the FMP among 21.8%), and early-increase (an early increase 5 y before the FMP among 16.2%). Women with the late-increase pattern had significantly lower postmenopausal cIMT (0.72 mm) and baPWV (1392 cm/s) levels than the stable group (0.77 mm and 1508 cm/s, respectively) adjusting for race, concurrent age, socioeconomic status, physical activity level, and premenopausal cardiovascular risk profile., Conclusions: Patterns of cycle length over the MT seem to be a marker of future vascular health that may help identify groups at greater or lesser risk of atherosclerosis after menopause., Competing Interests: Financial Disclosures/Conflict of Interests: Thurston: Consultant/advisory board member for Astellas, Procter & Gamble, and Pfizer, Consultant fees from Virtue Health. Santoro: Consultant for Ansh labs, advisory board member for Astellas, and scientific advisory board and grant support to her institution: Menogenix, Inc. The other authors have nothing to disclose., (Copyright © 2021 by The North American Menopause Society.)
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- 2021
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48. Age at Menopause in Relationship to Lipid Changes and Subclinical Carotid Disease Across 20 Years: Study of Women's Health Across the Nation.
- Author
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Matthews KA, Chen X, Barinas-Mitchell E, Brooks MM, Derby CA, Harlow S, Jackson EA, Thurston RC, and El Khoudary SR
- Subjects
- Adult, Apolipoproteins B blood, Cholesterol blood, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Middle Aged, Triglycerides blood, Women's Health, Age Factors, Cardiovascular Diseases epidemiology, Carotid Intima-Media Thickness, Heart Disease Risk Factors, Menopause
- Abstract
Background Younger age at final menstrual period (FMP) is associated with increased risk for cardiovascular disease events. This paper evaluated whether older age at FMP is associated with more favorable patterns of lipid changes during the menopause transition and whether these changes are associated with less subclinical carotid disease in the postmenopausal years. Methods and Results Lipids and lipoproteins were measured repeatedly among 1554 premenopausal women who had a natural menopause during follow-up years (median=18.8 years); a subset of 890 women also had measures of carotid intima media thickness, adventitial diameter, and plaque. Women who had an older FMP age had less adverse changes in cholesterol from 1 to 3 years after FMP, and in triglycerides from FMP to 3 years after FMP, but they had more adverse changes in ApoB and Apo A1 from 3 years before to 1 year after the FMP. Increasing cholesterol and ApoB from 1 to 3 years after FMP were associated with greater intima media thickness and adventitial diameter, and the greater likelihood of a plaque score >2 the older the age at FMP. Conclusions Despite the epidemiological literature showing early age at FMP is associated with elevated risk for cardiovascular disease events, older age at FMP had inconsistent associations with less adverse lipid changes in midlife, which did not translate into less risk for subclinical carotid disease and in some cases more risk. These findings are restricted to women who experience FMP in the normative age range for the menopausal transition.
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- 2021
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49. The Importance of Engaging in Physical Activity in Older Adulthood for Transitions Between Cognitive Status Categories and Death: A Coordinated Analysis of 14 Longitudinal Studies.
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Yoneda T, Lewis NA, Knight JE, Rush J, Vendittelli R, Kleineidam L, Hyun J, Piccinin AM, Hofer SM, Hoogendijk EO, Derby CA, Scherer M, Riedel-Heller S, Wagner M, van den Hout A, Wang W, Bennett DA, and Muniz-Terrera G
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- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Europe, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Male, North America, Cognitive Dysfunction prevention & control, Exercise, Health Behavior
- Abstract
Background: Given increasing incidence of cognitive impairment and dementia, further understanding of modifiable factors contributing to increased healthspan is crucial. Extensive literature provides evidence that physical activity (PA) delays the onset of cognitive impairment; however, it is unclear whether engaging in PA in older adulthood is sufficient to influence progression through cognitive status categories., Method: Applying a coordinated analysis approach, this project independently analyzed 14 longitudinal studies (NTotal = 52 039; mean baseline age across studies = 69.9-81.73) from North America and Europe using multistate survival models to estimate the impact of engaging in PA on cognitive status transitions (nonimpaired, mildly impaired, severely impaired) and death. Multinomial regression models were fit to estimate life expectancy (LE) based on American PA recommendations. Meta-analyses provided the pooled effect sizes for the role of PA on each transition and estimated LEs., Results: Controlling for baseline age, sex, education, and chronic conditions, analyses revealed that more PA is significantly associated with decreased risk of transitioning from nonimpaired to mildly impaired cognitive functioning and death, as well as substantially longer LE. Results also provided evidence for a protective effect of PA after onset of cognitive impairment (eg, decreased risk of transitioning from mild-to-severe cognitive impairment; increased likelihood of transitioning backward from severe-to-mild cognitive impairment), though between-study heterogeneity suggests a less robust association., Conclusions: These results yield evidence for the importance of engaging in PA in older adulthood for cognitive health, and a rationale for motivating older adults to engage consistently in PA., (© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of The Gerontological Society of America. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
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- 2021
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50. Cardiovascular risk and midlife cognitive decline in the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation.
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Derby CA, Hutchins F, Greendale GA, Matthews KA, Sternfeld B, Everson-Rose SA, Kazlauskaite R, Whitmer RA, and Brooks MM
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- Female, Humans, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests statistics & numerical data, United States, Cardiovascular Diseases complications, Cognitive Dysfunction complications, Heart Disease Risk Factors, Hypertension complications, Women's Health
- Abstract
Introduction: Cardiovascular risk factors in midlife have been linked to late life risk for Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD). The relation of vascular risk factors on cognitive decline within midlife has been less studied., Methods: Using data from the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation, we examined associations of midlife hypertension, elevated lipid levels, diabetes, fasting glucose, central adiposity, and Framingham heart age with rates of cognitive decline in women who completed multiple cognitive assessments of processing speed, and working and verbal memory during midlife., Results: Diabetes, elevated fasting glucose, central obesity, and heart age greater than chronological age were associated with rate of decline in processing speed during midlife. Vascular risk factors were not related to rate of decline in working or verbal memory., Discussion: Midlife may be a critical period for intervening on cardiovascular risk factors to prevent or delay later life cognitive impairment and ADRD., (© 2021 the Alzheimer's Association.)
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- 2021
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