Department of Neurology, University of California Davis, USA.
Public Health Sciences, University of California Davis, USA.
J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci. 2022 Feb 3;77(2):261-271. doi: 10.1093/geronb/gbab062.
Understanding racial/ethnic disparities in late-life cognitive health is a public health imperative. We used baseline data from the Kaiser Healthy Aging and Diverse Life Experiences (KHANDLE) study to examine how age, education, gender, and clinical diagnosis, a proxy for brain health, are associated with cross-sectional measures of cognition in diverse racial/ethnic groups.
Comprehensive measures of cognition were obtained using the Spanish and English Neuropsychological Assessment Scales and the National Institutes of Health Toolbox Cognitive Health Battery in a sample of 1,695 KHANDLE participants (Asians 24%, Blacks 26%, Latinos 20%, Whites 29%). A 25% random subsample was clinically evaluated and diagnosed with normal cognition, mild cognitive impairment (MCI), or dementia. Cognitive test scores were regressed on core demographic variables and diagnosis in the combined sample and in multiple group analyses stratified by racial/ethnic group.
Race/ethnicity and education were variably associated with test scores with strongest associations with tests of vocabulary and semantic memory. Older age was associated with poorer performance on all measures, and gender differences varied across cognitive tests. Clinical diagnosis of MCI or dementia was associated with average decrements in test scores that ranged from -0.41 to -0.84 SD, with largest differences on tests of executive function and episodic memory. With few exceptions, associations of demographic variables and clinical diagnosis did not differ across racial/ethnic groups.
The robust associations of cognitive test results with clinical diagnosis independent of core demographic variables and race/ethnicity support the validity of cognitive tests as indicators for brain health in diverse older adults.
了解晚年认知健康方面的种族/民族差异是公共卫生的当务之急。我们使用 Kaiser Healthy Aging and Diverse Life Experiences(KHANDLE)研究的基线数据,考察了年龄、教育程度、性别以及临床诊断(大脑健康的替代指标)与不同种族/民族群体认知的横断面测量之间的关系。
在 KHANDLE 研究的 1695 名参与者中(亚洲人占 24%,黑人占 26%,拉丁裔占 20%,白人占 29%),使用西班牙语和英语神经心理评估量表以及 NIH 工具包认知健康电池获得了全面的认知测量。随机抽取 25%的样本进行临床评估,并诊断为正常认知、轻度认知障碍(MCI)或痴呆。在合并样本和按种族/民族分层的多个组分析中,将认知测试得分回归到核心人口统计学变量和诊断上。
种族/民族和教育程度与测试分数存在不同程度的关联,与词汇和语义记忆测试的关联最强。年龄较大与所有测试的表现较差有关,性别差异在认知测试中各不相同。MCI 或痴呆的临床诊断与测试分数的平均下降相关,范围从-0.41 到-0.84 个标准差,在执行功能和情景记忆测试中差异最大。除了少数例外,人口统计学变量和临床诊断的关联在不同种族/民族群体中没有差异。
认知测试结果与临床诊断的强烈关联,独立于核心人口统计学变量和种族/民族,支持认知测试作为不同老年人群大脑健康的指标的有效性。