Department of Neurology, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA.
Evelyn F McKnight Brain Institute, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine, Miami, FL, USA.
J Alzheimers Dis. 2020;73(3):1221-1231. doi: 10.3233/JAD-190925.
Modifiable vascular risk factors (VRF) have been implicated in cognitive impairment.
We compared the prediction of cognitive performance between the Cardiovascular Risk Factors, Aging, and Incidence of Dementia (CAIDE) dementia risk score, a validated tool to estimate dementia risk using VRF, and the Northern Manhattan Study (NOMAS) global vascular risk score (GVRS), created to predict vascular events.
The CAIDE and GVRS scores were calculated based on baseline VRF among 1,290 stroke-free participants in the prospective population-based NOMAS MRI cohort (mean age 64±8 years, 60% women; 66% Hispanic, 17% Black, 15% White; 46% completed high school). Domain-specific Z-scores were derived for episodic and semantic memory, executive function, and processing speed, and averaged to calculate global cognition.
The CAIDE score was associated with worse global cognition at initial assessment (Beta per SD = -0.347, p < 0.0001), and with greater decline over time (Beta per SD = -0.033, p = 0.02). These associations were largely due to age and education, and the association with cognitive decline was not significant after adjusting for age, sex, and education. The GVRS was inversely associated with global cognition at initial testing (Beta per SD = -0.247, p < 0.0001) and greater decline over time (Beta per SD = -0.127, p < 0.0001), which persisted after adjusting for sociodemographics. The associations for both scores with initial cognitive performance were driven by executive function and processing speed, and the GVRS was associated with decline in episodic memory and processing speed.
The GVRS was a stronger predictor of cognitive decline than the CAIDE in a multi-ethnic urban cohort. The inclusion of glucose and smoking in the GVRS, which are absent in CAIDE, likely explains the better performance of the GVRS.
可改变的血管危险因素(VRF)与认知障碍有关。
我们比较了心血管危险因素、衰老和痴呆发生率(CAIDE)痴呆风险评分、一种使用 VRF 估计痴呆风险的经过验证的工具和北曼哈顿研究(NOMAS)全球血管风险评分(GVRS),以预测血管事件,来预测认知表现的差异。
根据前瞻性人群为基础的 NOMAS MRI 队列中 1290 名无卒中的参与者的基线 VRF 计算 CAIDE 和 GVRS 评分(平均年龄 64±8 岁,60%为女性;66%为西班牙裔,17%为黑人,15%为白人;46%完成了高中学业)。衍生出了情节记忆和语义记忆、执行功能和处理速度的特定领域 Z 分数,并将其平均计算为整体认知。
CAIDE 评分与初始评估时的整体认知较差相关(每标准差的 Beta 值为-0.347,p<0.0001),并且随着时间的推移认知下降更大(每标准差的 Beta 值为-0.033,p=0.02)。这些关联主要归因于年龄和教育,并且在调整年龄、性别和教育后,与认知下降的关联并不显著。GVRS 与初始测试时的整体认知呈负相关(每标准差的 Beta 值为-0.247,p<0.0001)和随时间的认知下降更大(每标准差的 Beta 值为-0.127,p<0.0001),在调整社会人口统计学因素后仍然存在。这两个评分与初始认知表现的关联主要归因于执行功能和处理速度,GVRS 与情节记忆和处理速度的下降有关。
在一个多民族城市队列中,GVRS 是认知下降的更好预测指标,而 CAIDE 则不是。GVRS 中包含了葡萄糖和吸烟,而 CAIDE 中则没有,这可能解释了 GVRS 表现更好的原因。