Lindsay M K Wallace1, Olga Theou1, Sultan Darvesh1, David A Bennett1, Aron S Buchman1, Melissa K Andrew1, Susan A Kirkland1, John D Fisk1, Kenneth Rockwood2. 1. From the Departments of Medicine (L.M.K.W., O.T., S.D., M.K.A., J.D.F., K.R.), Physiotherapy (O.T.), Community Health and Epidemiology (S.K.), and Psychiatry (J.D.F.), Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada; and Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center (D.A.B., A.S.B.), Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL. 2. From the Departments of Medicine (L.M.K.W., O.T., S.D., M.K.A., J.D.F., K.R.), Physiotherapy (O.T.), Community Health and Epidemiology (S.K.), and Psychiatry (J.D.F.), Dalhousie University, Halifax, Canada; and Rush Alzheimer's Disease Center (D.A.B., A.S.B.), Rush University Medical Center, Chicago, IL. Kenneth.rockwood@dal.ca.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that degree of frailty and neuropathologic burden independently contribute to global cognition and odds of dementia. METHODS: This was a secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study of older adults living in Illinois. Participants underwent an annual neuropsychological and clinical evaluation. We included 625 participants (mean age 89.7 ± 6.1 years; 67.5% female) who died and underwent autopsy. We quantified neuropathology using an index measure of 10 neuropathologic features: β-amyloid deposition, hippocampal sclerosis, Lewy bodies, tangle density, TDP-43, cerebral amyloid angiopathy, arteriolosclerosis, atherosclerosis, and gross and chronic cerebral infarcts. Clinical consensus determined dementia status, which we coded as no cognitive impairment, mild cognitive impairment, or dementia. A battery of 19 tests spanning multiple domains quantified global cognition. We operationalized frailty using a 41-item frailty index. We employed regression analyses to model relationships between neuropathology, frailty, and dementia. RESULTS: Both frailty and a neuropathology index were independently associated with global cognition and dementia status. These results held after controlling for traditional pathologic measures in a sample of participants with Alzheimer clinical syndrome. Frailty improved the fit of the model for dementia status (χ2[2] 72.64; p < 0.0001) and explained an additional 11%-12% of the variance in the outcomes. CONCLUSION: Dementia is a multiply determined condition, to which both general health, as captured by frailty, and neuropathology significantly contribute. This integrative view of dementia and health has implications for prevention and therapy; specifically, future research should evaluate frailty as a means of dementia risk reduction.
OBJECTIVE: To test the hypothesis that degree of frailty and neuropathologic burden independently contribute to global cognition and odds of dementia. METHODS: This was a secondary analysis of a prospective cohort study of older adults living in Illinois. Participants underwent an annual neuropsychological and clinical evaluation. We included 625 participants (mean age 89.7 ± 6.1 years; 67.5% female) who died and underwent autopsy. We quantified neuropathology using an index measure of 10 neuropathologic features: β-amyloid deposition, hippocampal sclerosis, Lewy bodies, tangle density, TDP-43, cerebral amyloid angiopathy, arteriolosclerosis, atherosclerosis, and gross and chronic cerebral infarcts. Clinical consensus determined dementia status, which we coded as no cognitive impairment, mild cognitive impairment, or dementia. A battery of 19 tests spanning multiple domains quantified global cognition. We operationalized frailty using a 41-item frailty index. We employed regression analyses to model relationships between neuropathology, frailty, and dementia. RESULTS: Both frailty and a neuropathology index were independently associated with global cognition and dementia status. These results held after controlling for traditional pathologic measures in a sample of participants with Alzheimer clinical syndrome. Frailty improved the fit of the model for dementia status (χ2[2] 72.64; p < 0.0001) and explained an additional 11%-12% of the variance in the outcomes. CONCLUSION: Dementia is a multiply determined condition, to which both general health, as captured by frailty, and neuropathology significantly contribute. This integrative view of dementia and health has implications for prevention and therapy; specifically, future research should evaluate frailty as a means of dementia risk reduction.
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