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Benzodiazepine use in relation to long-term dementia risk and imaging markers of neurodegeneration:a population-based study
- Source :
- Hofe , I V , Stricker , B H , Vernooij , M W , Ikram , M K , Ikram , M A & Wolters , F J 2024 , ' Benzodiazepine use in relation to long-term dementia risk and imaging markers of neurodegeneration : a population-based study ' , BMC Medicine , vol. 22 , no. 1 , 266 .
- Publication Year :
- 2024
-
Abstract
- Background: Benzodiazepine use is common, particularly in older adults. Benzodiazepines have well-established acute adverse effects on cognition, but long-term effects on neurodegeneration and dementia risk remain uncertain. Methods: We included 5443 cognitively healthy (MMSE ≥ 26) participants from the population-based Rotterdam Study (57.4% women, mean age 70.6 years). Benzodiazepine use from 1991 until baseline (2005–2008) was derived from pharmacy dispensing records, from which we determined drug type and cumulative dose. Benzodiazepine use was defined as prescription of anxiolytics (ATC-code: N05BA) or sedative-hypnotics (ATC-code: N05CD) between inception of pharmacy records and study baseline. Cumulative dose was calculated as the sum of the defined daily doses for all prescriptions. We determined the association with dementia risk until 2020 using Cox regression. Among 4836 participants with repeated brain MRI, we further determined the association of benzodiazepine use with changes in neuroimaging markers using linear mixed models. Results: Of all 5443 participants, 2697 (49.5%) had used benzodiazepines at any time in the 15 years preceding baseline, of whom 1263 (46.8%) used anxiolytics, 530 (19.7%) sedative-hypnotics, and 904 (33.5%) used both; 345 (12.8%) participants were still using at baseline assessment. During a mean follow-up of 11.2 years, 726 participants (13.3%) developed dementia. Overall, use of benzodiazepines was not associated with dementia risk compared to never use (HR [95% CI]: 1.06 [0.90–1.25]), irrespective of cumulative dose. Risk estimates were somewhat higher for any use of anxiolytics than for sedative-hypnotics (HR 1.17 [0.96–1.41] vs 0.92 [0.70–1.21]), with strongest associations for high cumulative dose of anxiolytics (HR [95% CI] 1.33 [1.04–1.71]). In imaging analyses, current use of benzodiazepine was associated cross-sectionally with lower brain volumes of the hippocampus, amygdala, and thalamus and longitudinally with acc
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Journal :
- Hofe , I V , Stricker , B H , Vernooij , M W , Ikram , M K , Ikram , M A & Wolters , F J 2024 , ' Benzodiazepine use in relation to long-term dementia risk and imaging markers of neurodegeneration : a population-based study ' , BMC Medicine , vol. 22 , no. 1 , 266 .
- Notes :
- application/pdf, English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1452811532
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource