| Literature DB >> 30689574 |
Isaac M Danat1, Angela Clifford1, Martin Partridge1, Weiju Zhou1, Aishat T Bakre1, Anthony Chen2, Danielle McFeeters1, Tina Smith1, Yuhui Wan3, John Copeland4, Kaarin J Anstey5, Ruoling Chen1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: It is unclear whether overweight and obesity in older age reduces or increases the risk of incident dementia.Entities:
Keywords: Body weight; dementia; meta-analysis; older people
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30689574 PMCID: PMC6700617 DOI: 10.3233/JAD-180763
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Alzheimers Dis ISSN: 1387-2877 Impact factor: 4.472
Fig.1Flowchart for literature search, selection, and inclusion of studies for the research. *Reasons included: studied midlife or younger baseline age <65 years, other outcome variables such as MCI, dementia+MCI, did not assess the key predictor (BMI or WC), different study design (such as cross-sectional or case control), etc. ∼Two studies were not used for meta-analysis due to fewer adjustments for co-variates.
Quality assessment of cohort studies on obesity and dementia risk
| Study | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 |
| Yoshitake et al. [ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ||
| Borenstein et al. [ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | |
| Gustafson et al. [ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
| Nourhashemi et al. [ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | |||||
| Buchman et al. [ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | |
| Hayden et al. [ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ||
| Lunchsinger et al. [ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | |
| Atti et al. [ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | |
| Dahl et al. [ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
| Hughes et al. [ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
| Fitzpatrick et al. [ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | |
| Scarmeas et al. [ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
| Power et al. [ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | |
| Lucca et al. [ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | |||
| Tolppanen et al. [ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | |
| Neergaard et al. [ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ | ★ |
(1) Cohort truly representative; (2) Controls from the same cohort; (3) Clear measurement of obesity at baseline; (4) Adequacy of Follow-up duration (≥24 months); (5) Reliable methods of dementia and AD diagnosis (i.e., Quality of outcome); (6) Data analysis controlled for smoking and medical co-morbidities; (7) Data analysis controlled for any other three confounders (Age, social class/education, alcohol, ApoE4 carrier status, medical therapies and ethnicity etc.); (8) Findings interpreted well; (9) Weakness mentioned and explained clearly; (10) Paper written well.
Fig.2Forest plot showing pooled estimates of all included studies for BMI and dementia risk. Three studies, i.e., in low part of the figure, did not examine the association of continuous BMI and dementia, and thus the overall meta-analysis took their data of categorized BMI in the highest group. f, female; m, male.
Fig.3Continuous BMI and dementia risk (short term versus long term follow up). In total, 11,376 participants with 1,741 dementia cases for short term and in total 5,198 participants with 631 dementia cases for long term studies. f, female; m, male.
Risk of incident dementia in relation to categorized BMI group analysis in pooling data
| BMI variable (study reference) | Number of studied population | Number of participants | Number of dementia Number of cases | RR (95% CI) |
| Categorized BMI analysis (I) | ||||
| Overweight [ | 6 | 11,864 | 1,568 | 0.87(0.66–1.14) |
| Obesity [ | 5 | 11,644 | 1,585 | 0.86 (0.60–1.22) |
| Underweight [ | 5 | 12,899 | 1,882 | 0.92 (0.64–1.33) |
| Categorized BMI analysis (II) | ||||
| Overweight [ | 4 | 15,608 | 1,453 | 0.98 (0.54–1.77) |
| Obesity [ | 5 | 18,872 | 1,594 | 1.17 (0.65–2.10) |
All findings in the table were from Random Effects Model in meta-analysis. aanalysis included data from new unpublished Chinese study (I) using normal-weight as a reference group, (II) using under-weight and normal-weight as a reference group (*one study (Hayden et al.) compared obesity versus other weights).
Fig.4Forest plots for large and larger waist circumference and dementia risk. f, female; m, male.