Last updated:
Author(s):
Pieter van der Veere, Imen Hammami, Georgina Buck, Melanie Greenland, Alison Offer, Michelle Nunn, William Whiteley, Richard Bulbulia, Rory Collins, Jane Armitage, Marion Mafham, Sarah Parish, the Heart Protection Study Collaborative Group
Publish date:
1 January 2022
Journal:
Alzheimer's & Dementia Diagnosis Assessment & Disease Monitoring
PubMed ID:
36092692

Abstract

Introduction: Populations at increased risk of dementia need to be identified for well-powered trials of preventive interventions. Weight loss, which often occurs in pre-clinical dementia, could identify a population at sufficiently high dementia risk.

Methods: In 12,975 survivors in the Heart Protection Study statin trial of people with, or at high risk of, cardiovascular disease, the association of weight change over 5 years during the trial with post-trial dementia recorded in electronic hospital admission and death records (n = 784) was assessed, after adjustment for age, sex, treatment allocation, and deprivation measures.

Results: Among the 60% without substantial weight gain (≤2 kg weight gain), each 1 kg weight loss was associated with a risk ratio for dementia of 1.04 (95% confidence interval, 1.02-1.07). Weight loss ≥4 kg and cognitive function below the mean identified participants aged ≥67 years with a 13% 10-year dementia risk.

Discussion: The combination of weight loss and high vascular risk identified individuals at high risk of dementia who could be recruited to dementia prevention trials.

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Institution:
University of Oxford, Great Britain

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