Department of Health Sciences Research, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota.
Department of Preventive Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2020 Jun;68(6):1250-1255. doi: 10.1111/jgs.16375. Epub 2020 Feb 22.
To examine the association between being a medical doctor (MD) and the risk of incident dementia.
Cohort study.
Olmsted County, Minnesota.
A total of 3460 participants (including 104 MDs), aged 70 years or older, of the population-based Mayo Clinic Study of Aging.
Participants were randomly selected from the community and had comprehensive cognitive evaluations at baseline and approximately every 15 months to assess for diagnosis of dementia. For participants who withdrew from the follow-up, dementia diagnosis was also assessed using information available in their medical record. The associations were examined using Cox proportional hazards models, adjusting for sex, education, and apolipoprotein E ε4, using age as the time scale.
MDs were older (vs "general population"), and most were males (93.3%). MDs without dementia at baseline did not have a significantly different risk for incident dementia (hazard ratio = 1.12; 95% confidence interval = 0.69-1.82; P = .64) compared to the general population.
Although the study includes a small number of older, mainly male, MDs, it provides a preliminary insight on cognitive health later in life in MDs, while most previous studies examine the health of younger MDs. Larger longitudinal studies are needed to examine these associations and investigate if associations are modified by sex. J Am Geriatr Soc 68:1250-1255, 2020.
探讨医生(MD)和痴呆症发病风险之间的关联。
队列研究。
明尼苏达州奥姆斯特德县。
共 3460 名参与者(包括 104 名 MD),年龄在 70 岁或以上,来自基于人群的梅奥诊所老龄化研究。
参与者从社区中随机抽取,在基线和大约每 15 个月进行全面认知评估,以评估痴呆症的诊断。对于退出随访的参与者,还使用其病历中的可用信息评估痴呆症的诊断。使用 Cox 比例风险模型,根据性别、教育程度和载脂蛋白 E ε4 调整关联,使用年龄作为时间尺度。
MD 年龄较大(与“一般人群”相比),大多数为男性(93.3%)。基线时无痴呆症的 MD 发生痴呆症的风险无显著差异(危险比=1.12;95%置信区间=0.69-1.82;P=0.64)与一般人群相比。
尽管该研究纳入了一小部分年龄较大、主要为男性的 MD,但它为 MD 晚年的认知健康提供了初步的见解,而大多数先前的研究都检查了年轻 MD 的健康状况。需要更大的纵向研究来检查这些关联,并研究这些关联是否受性别影响。美国老年学会杂志 68:1250-1255,2020。