Gustafson D R, Bäckman K, Waern M, Ostling S, Guo X, Zandi P, Mielke M M, Bengtsson C, Skoog I
Section for Psychiatry and Neurochemistry, Neuropsychiatric Epidemiology Unit, Sahlgrenska Academy, University of Gothenburg, Sweden.
Neurology. 2009 Nov 10;73(19):1559-66. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e3181c0d4b6.
High midlife and late-life adiposity may increase risk for dementia. Late-life decrease in body mass index (BMI) or body weight within several years of a dementia diagnosis has also been reported. Differences in study designs and analyses may provide different pictures of this relationship.
Thirty-two years of longitudinal body weight, BMI, waist circumference, and waist-to-hip ratio (WHR) data, from the Prospective Population Study of Women in Sweden, were related to dementia. A representative sample of 1,462 nondemented women was followed from 1968 at ages 38-60 years, and subsequently in 1974, 1980, 1992, and 2000, using neuropsychiatric, anthropometric, clinical, and other measurements. Cox proportional hazards regression models estimated incident dementia risk by baseline factors. Logistic regression models including measures at each examination were related to dementia among surviving participants 32 years later.
While Cox models showed no association between baseline anthropometric factors and dementia risk, logistic models showed that a midlife WHR greater than 0.80 increased risk for dementia approximately twofold (odds ratio 2.22, 95% confidence interval 1.00-4.94, p = 0.049) among surviving participants. Evidence for reverse causality was observed for body weight, BMI, and waist circumference in years preceding dementia diagnosis.
Among survivors to age 70, high midlife waist-to-hip ratio may increase odds of dementia. Traditional Cox models do not evidence this relationship. Changing anthropometric parameters in years preceding dementia onset indicate the dynamic nature of this seemingly simple relationship. There are midlife and late-life implications for dementia prevention, and analytical considerations related to identifying risk factors for dementia.
中年及老年时期的肥胖可能会增加患痴呆症的风险。也有报道称,在痴呆症诊断后的几年内,体重指数(BMI)或体重会下降。研究设计和分析的差异可能会对这种关系呈现出不同的情况。
瑞典女性前瞻性队列研究中32年的纵向体重、BMI、腰围和腰臀比(WHR)数据与痴呆症相关。对1462名无痴呆症的女性进行了代表性抽样,从1968年她们38至60岁开始跟踪,随后在1974年、1980年、1992年和2000年,使用神经精神病学、人体测量学、临床和其他测量方法进行研究。Cox比例风险回归模型通过基线因素估计痴呆症发病风险。包括每次检查测量值的逻辑回归模型与32年后存活参与者中的痴呆症相关。
虽然Cox模型显示基线人体测量因素与痴呆症风险之间无关联,但逻辑模型显示,在存活参与者中,中年WHR大于0.80会使痴呆症风险增加约两倍(优势比2.22,95%置信区间1.00 - 4.94,p = 0.049)。在痴呆症诊断前几年观察到体重、BMI和腰围存在反向因果关系的证据。
在活到70岁的人群中,中年高腰臀比可能会增加患痴呆症的几率。传统的Cox模型没有证明这种关系。在痴呆症发病前几年人体测量参数的变化表明了这种看似简单的关系的动态性质。这对痴呆症预防的中年和老年阶段以及识别痴呆症风险因素的分析考量具有启示意义。