Weber Adrian, Mak Shing Hung, Berenbaum Francis, Sellam Jérémie, Zheng Yong-Ping, Han Yifan, Wen Chunyi
Department of Biomedical Engineering, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Hung Hom, Hong Kong.
State Key Laboratory of Chinese Medicine and Molecular Pharmacology (Incubation), The Hong Kong Polytechnic University Shenzhen Research Institute, Shenzhen, PR China.
Medicine (Baltimore). 2019 Mar;98(10):e14355. doi: 10.1097/MD.0000000000014355.
To investigate the possible association between osteoarthritis (OA) and the risk of dementia.
Cohort, case-control, and cross-sectional studies were obtained from wide literature search up to 20 April 2018 from following electronic databases: PubMed, Embase, Cochrane, using the MeSH terms: "osteoarthritis" AND "dementia". The literature search was then expanded to congress abstracts. After screening and selection of relevant studies by two investigators, data was extracted. Estimates were then calculated using a random-effect size model. Sensitivity-analysis was conducted for gender and age adjusted studies and pooled for studies with STROBE quality assessment score ≥75%. Publication bias was assessed by Funnel plot. Analyses were performed using Data Analysis and Statistical Software Version 14.2.
Nearly 1549 publication references were initially retrieved. Twenty-six publications were checked with full-text. Six observational studies with 388,252 individuals were included. OA was associated with a significantly increased risk for dementia (OR = 1.20; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.03-1.39, I = 95.6%, P < .05). After pooling the studies with adjustment of age and gender, the risk increased (OR 1.36; 95% CI, 1.22-1.51, I = 75.6%, P < .0001). After pooling the study with a STROBE Quality score ≥75% the risk for dementia was slightly increased (OR 1.33; 95% CI, 1.17-1.5, I = 93.5%, p < 0.0001).
There is an association between osteoarthritis and the risk of dementia. This meta-analysis does not provide causality. Further prospective cohort studies are needed to clarify, if knee-, hip-, or hand-OA are independent risk factors for Alzheimer's disease and vascular dementia.
探讨骨关节炎(OA)与痴呆风险之间可能存在的关联。
通过广泛的文献检索,从截至2018年4月20日的以下电子数据库中获取队列研究、病例对照研究和横断面研究:PubMed、Embase、Cochrane,使用医学主题词:“骨关节炎”和“痴呆”。然后将文献检索范围扩大到会议摘要。由两名研究人员筛选并选择相关研究后,提取数据。然后使用随机效应量模型计算估计值。对性别和年龄调整后的研究进行敏感性分析,并对STROBE质量评估得分≥75%的研究进行汇总。通过漏斗图评估发表偏倚。使用数据分析和统计软件版本14.2进行分析。
最初检索到近1549篇参考文献。对26篇文献进行了全文检查。纳入了6项观察性研究,共388,252名个体。OA与痴呆风险显著增加相关(OR = 1.20;95%置信区间(CI),1.03 - 1.39,I = 95.6%,P <.05)。在对年龄和性别进行调整后汇总研究,风险增加(OR 1.36;95% CI,1.22 - 1.51,I = 75.6%,P <.0001)。在汇总STROBE质量得分≥75%的研究后,痴呆风险略有增加(OR 1.33;95% CI,1.17 - 1.5,I = 93.5%,p < 0.0001)。
骨关节炎与痴呆风险之间存在关联。本荟萃分析未提供因果关系。需要进一步的前瞻性队列研究来阐明膝骨关节炎、髋骨关节炎或手骨关节炎是否为阿尔茨海默病和血管性痴呆的独立危险因素。