Rej Soham, Saleem Mahwesh, Herrmann Nathan, Stefatos Anthi, Rau Allison, Lanctôt Krista L
Department of Psychiatry.
Department of Pharmacology and Toxicology, University of Toronto; Neuropsychopharmacology Research Group, Sunnybrook Health Sciences Centre, Toronto, ON.
Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat. 2016 Nov 10;12:2913-2920. doi: 10.2147/NDT.S115505. eCollection 2016.
Statins have been associated with decreased cognition due to the effects of low concentrations of low-density lipoprotein (LDL) on brain function. This has remained controversial and is particularly relevant to patients with coronary artery disease (CAD), who have an increased risk of cognitive decline and are frequently prescribed statins. This study hypothesized that low concentration of LDL is associated with poor cognition in CAD patients using statins. It also explored the association between high-dose versus low-dose statins on cognition in this population.
Baseline cross-sectional data from a longitudinal study of 120 statin-using CAD patients were examined (mean statin duration 25±43 months). The main outcomes were measures of global cognition and cognitive domains, with poor cognition defined as cognitive performance ≤1 standard deviation below the population age and education adjusted means. A battery of cognitive tests was used to assess verbal memory, executive function, speed of processing, visuospatial memory, and global cognition. Adjusting for age, sex, education, and other covariates, multivariable logistic regression analyses assessed associations between low LDL levels (<1.5 mmol/L), statin use, and poor cognition.
LDL levels were not associated with global cognition or individual cognitive domains. High-dose statin use was associated with higher visuospatial memory (odds ratio, OR [95% confidence interval, CI] =0.12 [0.02-0.66], =0.01) and executive functioning (OR =0.25 [0.06-0.99], =0.05). This effect was independent of covariates such as LDL levels.
Low LDL levels do not appear to be associated with poor cognition in CAD patients using statins. Whether high-dose statin use may have positive effects on cognition in CAD patients could be investigated in future studies.
由于低浓度低密度脂蛋白(LDL)对脑功能的影响,他汀类药物一直与认知能力下降有关。这一点仍存在争议,对于冠状动脉疾病(CAD)患者尤其如此,他们认知能力下降的风险增加,且经常被开他汀类药物。本研究假设,使用他汀类药物的CAD患者中,低浓度LDL与认知能力差有关。研究还探讨了高剂量与低剂量他汀类药物对该人群认知能力的影响。
对一项针对120名使用他汀类药物的CAD患者的纵向研究的基线横断面数据进行了检查(他汀类药物平均使用时间为25±43个月)。主要结局指标为整体认知和认知领域的测量指标,认知能力差定义为认知表现低于根据年龄和教育程度调整后的人群均值1个标准差。采用一系列认知测试来评估言语记忆、执行功能、处理速度、视觉空间记忆和整体认知。在调整年龄、性别、教育程度和其他协变量后,可以通过多变量逻辑回归分析评估低LDL水平(<1.5 mmol/L)、使用他汀类药物与认知能力差之间的关联。
LDL水平与整体认知或个体认知领域无关。高剂量使用他汀类药物与较高的视觉空间记忆(优势比,OR[95%置信区间,CI]=0.12[0.02-0.66],P=0.01)和执行功能(OR=0.25[0.06-0.99],P=0.05)相关。这种效应独立于LDL水平等协变量。
对于使用他汀类药物的CAD患者,低LDL水平似乎与认知能力差无关。高剂量使用他汀类药物是否可能对CAD患者的认知能力产生积极影响,可在未来研究中进行探讨。