| Literature DB >> 35356299 |
Steven Jett1, Niharika Malviya1, Eva Schelbaum1, Grace Jang1, Eva Jahan1, Katherine Clancy1, Hollie Hristov1, Silky Pahlajani1,2, Kellyann Niotis1, Susan Loeb-Zeitlin3, Yelena Havryliuk3, Richard Isaacson1, Roberta Diaz Brinton4,5, Lisa Mosconi1,2.
Abstract
After advanced age, female sex is the major risk factor for late-onset Alzheimer's disease (AD), the most common cause of dementia affecting over 24 million people worldwide. The prevalence of AD is higher in women than in men, with postmenopausal women accounting for over 60% of all those affected. While most research has focused on gender-combined risk, emerging data indicate sex and gender differences in AD pathophysiology, onset, and progression, which may help account for the higher prevalence in women. Notably, AD-related brain changes develop during a 10-20 year prodromal phase originating in midlife, thus proximate with the hormonal transitions of endocrine aging characteristic of the menopause transition in women. Preclinical evidence for neuroprotective effects of gonadal sex steroid hormones, especially 17β-estradiol, strongly argue for associations between female fertility, reproductive history, and AD risk. The level of gonadal hormones to which the female brain is exposed changes considerably across the lifespan, with relevance to AD risk. However, the neurobiological consequences of hormonal fluctuations, as well as that of hormone therapies, are yet to be fully understood. Epidemiological studies have yielded contrasting results of protective, deleterious and null effects of estrogen exposure on dementia risk. In contrast, brain imaging studies provide encouraging evidence for positive associations between greater cumulative lifetime estrogen exposure and lower AD risk in women, whereas estrogen deprivation is associated with negative consequences on brain structure, function, and biochemistry. Herein, we review the existing literature and evaluate the strength of observed associations between female-specific reproductive health factors and AD risk in women, with a focus on the role of endogenous and exogenous estrogen exposures as a key underlying mechanism. Chief among these variables are reproductive lifespan, menopause status, type of menopause (spontaneous vs. induced), number of pregnancies, and exposure to hormonal therapy, including hormonal contraceptives, hormonal therapy for menopause, and anti-estrogen treatment. As aging is the greatest risk factor for AD followed by female sex, understanding sex-specific biological pathways through which reproductive history modulates brain aging is crucial to inform preventative and therapeutic strategies for AD.Entities:
Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; hormones; menopause; reproductive history; risk factors; sex differences
Year: 2022 PMID: 35356299 PMCID: PMC8959926 DOI: 10.3389/fnagi.2022.831807
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Aging Neurosci ISSN: 1663-4365 Impact factor: 5.750
Effects of surgical menopause on cognitive function and AD risk.
| References | Location | Type of study | Surgical menopause cases, | Surgical procedure type | Controls, | Age at menopause, mean (SD) | Follow up | Hormone therapy (HT) use | Endpoints | Primary and secondary outcomes |
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| Canada | Randomized placebo controlled trial | 40 | Hysterectomy with bilateral oophorectomy | 10 | Surgical menopause group 45 (n.a.) years; control group: 37 (n.a.) years | 4-, 5-, and 8-month postoperative follow-up | Climacteron, Delestrogen, Delatestryl, or placebo | Change in cognitive performance | • Oophorectomized women exhibited lower performance on all cognitive measures vs. non-oophorectomized women. |
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| Canada | Randomized placebo controlled trial | 12 | Bilateral oophorectomy | n.a. | 47 (n.a.) years | 2 months | 10 mg intramuscular estradiol valerate or placebo | Change in cognitive performance | • Oophorectomized women not taking HT exhibited lower performance on a paired-associates test vs. oophorectomized women taking HT. |
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| Canada | Randomized placebo controlled trial | 19 | Bilateral oophorectomy | n.a. | 48(5) years | 2-month postoperative follow-up | 10 mg intramuscular estradiol valerate injections or placebo | Change in cognitive performance | Oophorectomized women not taking HT exhibited lower performance on delayed paired-associates test vs. oophorectomized women taking HT. |
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| United States | Observational, longitudinal | 1,088 | Bilateral oophorectomy | 5,022 | Current HT users: 44(0.20) years; | 3 years | Conjugated estrogen, or conjugated estrogen plus medroxyprogesterone | Change in cognitive performance | • Oophorectomized women aged 48–57 taking HT exhibited higher Controlled Oral Word Association scores vs. oophorectomized non-users. |
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| Italy | Observational, cross-sectional | 27 | Hysterectomy with bilateral oophorectomy | 76 | Surgical menopause: 45(5) years; spontaneous menopause: 49(3) years | N/A | Women taking HT were excluded | Cognitive performance | • Oophorectomized women recalled fewer words during the serial learning test vs. spontaneous menopause. |
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| United States | Observational, cross-sectional | 35 | Bilateral oophorectomy | n.a. | HT users: 42(5) years; Non-users: 46(6) years | N/A | Conjugated estrogen, or conjugated estrogen plus medroxyprogesterone | Cognitive performance | Oophorectomized women taking HT exhibited higher scores on memory (BIMC), clock and block design tests than non-users |
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| Egypt | Observational, longitudinal | 35 | Hysterectomy and bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy | 18 | 41(5) years | 3- and 6- month post-operation | Women taking HT were excluded | Change in cognitive performance | • Oophorectomized women showed cognitive decline in MMSE and Wechsler Memory Scale subtests at follow-up visits. |
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| United States | Observational, longitudinal | 161 | Not specified | 200 | 43(9) years | Median 12.8 years | Women taking HT were excluded | Change in cognitive performance | No significant association between surgical menopause and cognitive performance |
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| United States | Observational, longitudinal | 1,489 | Unilateral or bilateral oophorectomy with or without hysterectomy | 1,472 | Not reported | Median 25–30 years | Not specified | Cognitive impairment and dementia incidence | • Unilateral and bilateral oophorectomy before age 49 increased risk of cognitive impairment or dementia. Risk increased with surgery at younger age. |
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| France | Observational, longitudinal | 186 | Not specified | 810 | 50(5) years | 2- and 4- years | Transdermal estradiol with or without progesterone | Change in cognitive performance | No significant association between surgical menopause and cognitive performance |
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| Denmark | Observational, longitudinal | 215,444 | Hysterectomy, Unilateral or Bilateral Oophorectomy | 2,097,944 | Hysterectomy: 48 (n.a.) years; Unilateral oophorectomy: 45 (n.a.) years; Bilateral oophorectomy: 57 (n.a.) years | 16.6 years | Not specified | Dementia incidence | • Younger age at oophorectomy and hysterectomy was associated with early dementia. |
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| China | Observational, cross sectional | 50 | Unilateral oophorectomy with or without hysterectomy | 50 | 43(3) years | N/A | Women taking HT were excluded | Cognitive performance | Oophorectomized women exhibited lower performance on immediate and delayed word recall vs. spontaneous menopause |
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| United States | Observational, longitudinal | 603 | Not specified | 1,281 | Surgical menopause: 43(7) years; Spontaneous menopause: 49(5) years | Annually, up to 18 years | Not specified | Change in cognitive performance; AD incidence; brain autopsy samples | • Surgical menopause at a younger age was associated with steeper global cognitive decline. |
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| France | Observational, longitudinal | 487 | Bilateral oophorectomy | 4,381 | Surgical menopause: | 2-, 4-, and 7- years | Current and past users of transdermal estradiol, or unopposed estradiol | Change in cognitive performance and dementia incidence | • Oophorectomized women with younger age at surgical menopausal exhibited a 35% increased risk of global cognitive decline. |
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| United States | Observational, longitudinal | 123 | Bilateral oophorectomy | 803 | Surgical menopause: 45(5) years; Spontaneous menopause: 50(6) years | 3(1) years | Women taking HT were excluded | Change in cognitive performance | Oophorectomy before menopause was associated with visual and semantic memory decline vs. spontaneous menopause |
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| United States | Observational, cross-sectional | 23 | Bilateral salpingo-oophorectomy | 20 | Surgical menopause: median 46 years; controls n.a. | N/A | Conjugated equine estrogen, conjugated equine estrogen with progestin | Cognitive performance; | • No differences in cognitive scores between surgical and spontaneous menopause groups. |
FIGURE 1Reproductive history effects on gray matter volume. Summary of MRI studies indicating associations of reproductive history indicators and MRI-derived gray matter (GM) volume: (A) Surface renderings of statistical parametric maps displaying areas of lower GM volume in midlife women as compared to age-controlled men (Rahman et al., 2020). Results are displayed on a color-coded scale with corresponding Z values, where Z > 3 corresponds to p < 0.05, corrected for multiple comparisons. (B) LASSO regression models indicate that midlife sex differences in GM volume were driven by menopause status, followed by use of hormonal replacement therapy (HT) and hysterectomy status (Rahman et al., 2020). Coefficients from LASSO regressions ranking multiple exposures are displayed on a color-coded scale such that coefficients >0.5 correspond to p < 0.05. (C) Among midlife women, GM density was highest in premenopausal women (PRE), intermediate in perimenopausal women (PERI), and lowest in postmenopausal women (POST), adjusting by age and intracranial volume (Mosconi et al., 2017b,2021); Plots display the mean, covariate-adjusted GM density (SE) in temporal cortex and precuneus of PRE, PERI and POST groups; **p < 0.001, *p < 0.01. (D) Brain regions undergoing GM volume changes as a result of the menopause transition exhibit substantial anatomical overlap with the brain estrogen network, including medial temporal lobe, insula, anterior and posterior cingulate, precuneus, parieto-temporal and frontal cortices (Rahman et al., 2020). Statistical parametric maps showing 3D GM volume differences between PRE, PERI and POST groups are superimposed on a standardized T1-MRI image at p < 0.05. (E) In longitudinal studies, GM volume declined in temporal regions of postmenopausal groups (negative values), but showed recovery in precuneus (positive values) (Mosconi et al., 2018, 2021). Surface renderings display significant GM volume changes post-menopause, which are represented on a color-coded scale with corresponding Z values, where Z > 3 and Z < −3 correspond to p < 0.05. (F) GM volume changes in precuneus correlated with memory changes among postmenopausal women (Mosconi et al., 2021). (G) GM volume is influenced by additional reproductive history events such as a longer reproductive span and exogenous estrogen exposure (Schelbaum et al., 2021). Statistical parametric maps (SPM) displaying brain regions showing significant associations between longer reproductive spans and GM volume. Effects are represented on a color-coded scale with corresponding Z values, where Z > 3 corresponds to p < 0.05.
Effects of reproductive history factors on cognitive function and AD risk.
| References | Location | Type of study | Study population | Inclusion of surgical menopause cases | Age at cognitive assessment, mean (SD) | Follow up visits | Exposures | Endpoints | Primary outcomes |
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| Netherlands | Observational, longitudinal | 3,601 cognitively normal women aged over 60 years | 2,737 women with spontaneous menopause; 865 women with surgical menopause | 70(9) years | 6 years; range 0–9 years | Age at menarche, age at menopause, reproductive span | Dementia and AD incidence | • Longer reproductive span and later age at natural menopause were associated with dementia and AD incidence in APOE-4 carriers. |
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| Sweden | Observational, cross-sectional | 5,844 women aged 65–84 years (1,111 with cognitive impairment, 4,733 controls) | Not specified | Cognitively Impaired: 75(6) years; Controls: 72(5) years | N/A | Age at menarche, age at menopause, reproductive span, total length of estrogen exposure (reproductive span + HT duration years), number of childbirths, HT use and duration | Difference between dementia patients and controls | • Menarche before age 12 or after age 14, and shorter reproductive span were associated with dementia. |
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| Italy | Observational, cross-sectional | 405 women over 65 years (204 probable AD patients, 201 controls) | AD patients: 21% surgical menopause; Controls: 13% surgical menopause | AD patients: 75(7) years; Controls: 74(6) years | 15 months | Age at menarche, age at menopause, reproductive span, number of pregnancies and miscarriages, surgical menopause, breast pathology, HT use | Difference between AD patients and controls | • No differences in age at menarche, age at menopause, reproductive span, number of miscarriages, or breast pathology between AD patients and controls. |
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| France | Observational, longitudinal | 996 cognitively normal women aged 65–94 years | 810 women with spontaneous menopause; 186 women with surgical menopause | 73(6) years | 2- and 4 years | Age at menarche, age at menopause, reproductive span, parity (number of children), age at first birth, HT use, contraceptive use | Cognitive performance; Dementia incidence | • Longer reproductive span was associated with higher verbal fluency scores but not with dementia incidence |
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| China | Observational, longitudinal | 8,685 cognitively normal women aged 50–95 years | Women with hysterectomy or oophorectomy were excluded | 60(7) years | 1–3 years | Reproductive span, parity (number of children), age at first birth, time spent breastfeeding | Change in cognitive performance | • Longer reproductive span, lower parity, and less time spent breastfeeding were associated with higher cognitive performance on word recall and MMSE. |
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| England | Observational, cross-sectional | 89 women aged 70–100 years (38 AD patients, 51 controls) | 32 women with surgical menopause | Dementia: 86(6) years; Controls: 77 (7) years | N/A | Age at menarche, age at menopause, reproductive span, total length of estrogen exposure (reproductive span and HT duration years minus time spent breastfeeding), time spent pregnant, parity, age at first birth; time spent breastfeeding, number of menstrual cycles, HT use, contraceptive use | Difference between AD patients and controls | • Controls exhibited longer cumulative estrogen exposure, first birth after age 21, and more months spent pregnant vs. AD patients. |
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| Latin America, China | Observational, longitudinal | 6,854 cognitively normal women over 65 years in Latin America and China | Not specified | 74(7) years | 3–5 years | Age at menarche, age at menopause, reproductive span, index of cumulative endogenous estrogen exposure parity (number of live births), age at first birth, premature ovarian failure | Dementia incidence | • Greater parity was associated with increased dementia incidence. |
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| United States | Observational, longitudinal | 6,137 cognitively normal women, mean age 51(4) years at baseline | 4,047 women with spontaneous menopause;2,090 women with hysterectomy | 77(5) years | 9(6) years; range 0–22 years | Age at menarche, age at menopause, reproductive span, hysterectomy status | Dementia and AD incidence | Later age at menarche, menopause before 47 years, reproductive spans shorter than 34 years, and having had a hysterectomy were associated with higher dementia incidence |
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| United States | Observational, longitudinal | 2,114 cognitively normal women over 65 years | Not specified | 75(7) years | Triennial visits for 12 years | Lifetime endogenous estrogen exposure (reproductive span minus time spent breastfeeding), HT use | Change in cognitive performance | • Longer endogenous estrogen exposure was associated with higher modified MMSE (3MS) scores. |
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| Sweden | Observational, longitudinal | 1,364 cognitively normal women, mean age 53(6) years at baseline | Women with hysterectomy or oophorectomy were excluded | 80(8) years | 27(10) years | Age at menarche, age at menopause, reproductive span, number of pregnancies, time spent breastfeeding, HT use, contraceptive use | Dementia and AD incidence | • Later age at menopause and longer reproductive span were associated with increased risk of dementia and AD. |
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| China | Observational, longitudinal | 9,656 women aged 45–74 years at baseline | 8,222 women with spontaneous menopause; 1,324 with surgical menopause | 78(7) years | Range 5–23 years | Age at menarche, age at menopause, reproductive span, number of children, age at first birth, HT use, contraceptive use and duration | • Cognitive performance | Older age at menopause, longer reproductive span, short-term contraceptive use, and HT use were positively associated with SM-MMSE performance. |
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| Sweden | Observational, longitudinal | 75 women aged 46–60 years at baseline, free of dementia | Women with hysterectomy or oophorectomy were excluded | 74 years; range 70–85 years | 20(4) years | Age at menarche, age at menopause, reproductive span | CSF Aβ42, Aβ42/Aβ40, hyperphosphorylated tau (P-Tau), total tau (T-Tau) | • Earlier age at menarche and longer reproductive span were associated with higher P-Tau and lower Aβ42/Aβ40. |
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| United States | Observational, cross-sectional | 99 cognitively normal women aged 40–65 years | 36 women with spontaneous menopause; 13 women with surgical menopause | 52(6) years | N/A | Age at menarche, age at menopause, reproductive span, number of pregnancies and children, HT use, contraceptive use, hysterectomy status | Cognitive performance; gray matter volume (GMV) on MRI | • Longer reproductive span, number of children and pregnancies, HT use, and oral contraceptive use were associated with larger GMV in regions vulnerable to cognitive aging and AD. |
FIGURE 2Associations of reproductive health indicators with cognitive aging, AD biomarkers and AD risk. Reproductive health indicators are (A) age at menarche, (B) type of menopause (surgical vs spontaneous), (C) age at menopause, (D) reproductive span, (E) grandparity vs nulliparity, (F) hormonal contraceptive use. Pie charts summarize the percentage of studies reporting effects of reproductive health indicators and endpoints (including AD or dementia incidence, cognitive performance, and AD biomarkers) in terms of higher, lower, or null AD risk. For example, in panel (C), 56% of studies report associations between earlier age at menopause and higher AD risk.
FIGURE 3Associations of reproductive span with regional gray matter volume in midlife. (A) Statistical parametric maps displaying significant associations between reproductive span years and GM volume are superimposed on a standardizedT1-MRI image and represented on a color-coded scale with corresponding Z values, at p < 0.05 corrected for multiple comparisons. (B) Scatterplots of associations between reproductive span and GM volume in superior parietal and precuneus in (left) the entire postmenopausal cohort and (right) among women who had undergone spontaneous menopause, thus excluding surgical menopause cases. Figures are modified from results included in Schelbaum et al. (2021).
Pregnancy-related factors, cognitive function and dementia risk.
| References | Location | Study population | Inclusion of nulliparous women | Follow Up Visits | Parity-related exposures | Mean age (SD), years | Endpoints | Primary outcomes |
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| Germany | 295 women (106 with AD, 117 with depression, 72 controls) | Yes | N/A | Parity (parous vs nulliparous); number of children | AD: 77(10); depression: 71(8); Control: 72(11) | Difference between AD patients and controls | • Women with AD were more likely to be parous than nulliparous. |
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| Australia | 326 healthy premenopausal women | Yes | 8 years | Parity (parous vs nulliparous); number of pregnancies | 57(3) years | Change in cognitive performance | Parity was positively associated with verbal memory |
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| United States | 361 Caucasian and African American women with and without dementia | Yes | 13 years | Number of live births, oral contraceptive usage | 63(14) years | Change in cognitive performance | • Parity was associated with cognitive decline. |
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| United States | 17 healthy postmenopausal women | Yes | 10 weeks | Number of childbirths | 57(7) years | Change in cognitive performance | No associations between parity and cognitive performance |
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| Sweden | 5,844 women (1,111 with cognitive impairment, 4,733 controls) | Yes | N/A | Number of children | Cognitively Impaired: 75(6) years; Control: 72(5) years | Difference between dementia patients and controls | Women with dementia were more likely to have ≥ 5 children compared to controls. |
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| Italy | 405 women (204 with probable AD, aged 75(7) years, 201 controls aged 74(6) controls) | Yes | 15 months | Number of pregnancies | AD: 75(7) years; Control: 74(6) years | Difference between AD patients and controls | • AD patients had more pregnancies than controls. |
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| Italy | 176 women with sporadic AD | Yes | N/A | Number of children | 77(7) years | Association with age at onset of AD | • Women with children had a younger age at AD onset compared to nulliparous women. |
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| United States | 73 AD patients (42 women and 31 men) confirmed at autopsy | Yes | N/A | Number of children | Women: 86(11) years; Men: 73(9) years | Association with AD pathology | • Women who had more children had greater AD neuropathology and neuritic plaques vs. nulliparous women. |
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| France | 996 cognitively normal women | Yes | 2-, 4- years | Parity (parous vs nulliparous), age at first birth, oral contraceptive use | 73(6) years | Cognitive performance; Dementia incidence | • Women who gave birth before age 21 had lower MMSE scores, visual memory scores, and psychomotor speed vs. those with first birth between 21 and 29 years. |
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| China | 8,685 cognitively normal women | No | 1–3 years | Number of children, age at first birth, breastfeeding duration | 60(7) years | Change in cognitive performance | • Lower parity and less time spent breastfeeding were associated with higher cognitive performance on word recall and MMSE. |
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| England | 95 women (39 with dementia, 56 controls) | Yes | N/A | Parity (nulliparous vs parous), age at first birth, cumulative months pregnant, cumulative months breastfeeding | Dementia: 86(6) years; Control: 77(7) years | Difference between AD patients and controls | • AD patients had fewer cumulative months pregnant compared to controls. |
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| Europe/Asia | 7,010 dementia free women | Yes | 5(3) years | Number of childbirths or children | 72(8) years | Dementia or AD incidence | • Parity was not associated with AD incidence. |
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| Europe | 19,787 cognitively normal women | Yes | N/A | Number of live childbirths, age at first birth, years since last birth | 64(7) years | MRI-derived brain age | Increasing parity was associated with younger ‘brain age’ on MRI |
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| Korea | 237 women (89 with and 148 without MCI) | Yes | N/A | Parity (nulliparous vs parous); number of pregnancies, number of childbirths | 70(8) years | Cognitive performance, MRI, PiB PET | • Women with ≥ 5 children exhibited lower MMSE scores vs. < 5 children. |
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| Europe | 303,196 male and female (160,077 females) | Yes | N/A | Number of children | 57(8) years | Cognitive performance, MRI-derived brain age | • Men and women with ≥ 1 children exhibited faster response time and better visual memory vs. no children. |
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| China | 9,656 women | Yes | Range 5–23 years | Number of children, age at first birth, oral contraceptive usage | 78(7) years | Change in cognitive performance | • Women with ≥ 5 children had reduced cognitive performance vs. 1–2 children. |
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| United States | 99 cognitively normal women | Yes | N/A | Number of pregnancies and children, hormonal contraceptive use | 52(6) years | Cognitive performance; gray matter volume (GMV) on MRI | Number of children and pregnancies, and oral contraceptive use were associated with larger GMV in regions vulnerable to AD. |