Beydoun May A, Beydoun Hind A, Gamaldo Alyssa A, Teel Alison, Zonderman Alan B, Wang Youfa
Laboratory of Epidemiology and Population Sciences, National Institute on Aging, NIA/NIH/IRP, 251 Bayview Blvd,, Suite 100, Room #: 04B118, Baltimore, MD 21224, USA.
BMC Public Health. 2014 Jun 24;14:643. doi: 10.1186/1471-2458-14-643.
Cognitive impairment, including dementia, is a major health concern with the increasing aging population. Preventive measures to delay cognitive decline are of utmost importance. Alzheimer's disease (AD) is the most frequent cause of dementia, increasing in prevalence from <1% below the age of 60 years to >40% above 85 years of age.
We systematically reviewed selected modifiable factors such as education, smoking, alcohol, physical activity, caffeine, antioxidants, homocysteine (Hcy), n-3 fatty acids that were studied in relation to various cognitive health outcomes, including incident AD. We searched MEDLINE for published literature (January 1990 through October 2012), including cross-sectional and cohort studies (sample sizes > 300). Analyses compared study finding consistency across factors, study designs and study-level characteristics. Selecting studies of incident AD, our meta-analysis estimated pooled risk ratios (RR), population attributable risk percent (PAR%) and assessed publication bias.
In total, 247 studies were retrieved for systematic review. Consistency analysis for each risk factor suggested positive findings ranging from ~38.9% for caffeine to ~89% for physical activity. Education also had a significantly higher propensity for "a positive finding" compared to caffeine, smoking and antioxidant-related studies. Meta-analysis of 31 studies with incident AD yielded pooled RR for low education (RR = 1.99; 95% CI: 1.30-3.04), high Hcy (RR = 1.93; 95% CI: 1.50-2.49), and current/ever smoking status (RR = 1.37; 95% CI: 1.23-1.52) while indicating protective effects of higher physical activity and n-3 fatty acids. Estimated PAR% were particularly high for physical activity (PAR% = 31.9; 95% CI: 22.7-41.2) and smoking (PAR% = 31.09%; 95% CI: 17.9-44.3). Overall, no significant publication bias was found.
Higher Hcy levels, lower educational attainment, and decreased physical activity were particularly strong predictors of incident AD. Further studies are needed to support other potential modifiable protective factors, such as caffeine.
随着人口老龄化加剧,包括痴呆症在内的认知障碍成为主要的健康问题。采取预防措施延缓认知衰退至关重要。阿尔茨海默病(AD)是痴呆症最常见的病因,其患病率从60岁以下的不到1%增至85岁以上的超过40%。
我们系统回顾了一些可改变的因素,如教育、吸烟、饮酒、体育活动、咖啡因、抗氧化剂、同型半胱氨酸(Hcy)、n-3脂肪酸,这些因素与包括AD发病在内的各种认知健康结果相关。我们在MEDLINE中检索了1990年1月至2012年10月发表的文献,包括横断面研究和队列研究(样本量>300)。分析比较了各因素、研究设计和研究水平特征之间研究结果的一致性。在选择AD发病的研究时,我们的荟萃分析估计了合并风险比(RR)、人群归因风险百分比(PAR%)并评估了发表偏倚。
总共检索到247项研究用于系统回顾。对每个风险因素的一致性分析表明阳性结果的比例从咖啡因的约38.9%到体育活动的约89%不等。与咖啡因、吸烟和抗氧化剂相关研究相比,教育“阳性结果”的倾向也显著更高。对31项AD发病研究的荟萃分析得出低教育水平(RR = 1.99;95%CI:1.30 - 3.04)、高Hcy水平(RR = 1.93;95%CI:1.50 - 2.49)以及当前/曾经吸烟状态(RR = 1.37;95%CI:1.23 - 1.52)的合并RR,同时表明较高的体育活动和n-3脂肪酸具有保护作用。体育活动(PAR% = 31.9;95%CI:22.7 - 41.2)和吸烟(PAR% = 31.09%;95%CI:17.9 - 44.3)的估计PAR%特别高。总体而言,未发现显著的发表偏倚。
较高的Hcy水平、较低的教育程度和体育活动减少是AD发病的特别强的预测因素。需要进一步研究来支持其他潜在的可改变保护因素,如咖啡因。