Department of Medicine, Boston University School of Medicine, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Department of Biostatistics, Boston University School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts, USA.
Gerontology. 2022;68(1):17-29. doi: 10.1159/000514950. Epub 2021 May 4.
Cross-sectional analyses have associated familial longevity with better cognitive function and lower risk of cognitive impairment in comparison with individuals without familial longevity. The extent to which long-lived families also demonstrate slower rates of cognitive aging (i.e., change in cognition over time) is unknown. This study examined longitudinally collected data among 2 generations of the Long Life Family Study (LLFS) to compare rates of cognitive change across relatives and spouse controls.
We analyzed change in 6 neuropsychological test scores collected approximately 8 years apart among LLFS family members (n = 3,972) versus spouse controls (n = 1,092) using a Bayesian hierarchical model that included age, years of follow-up, sex, education, generation, and field center and all possible pairwise interactions.
At a mean age of 88 years at enrollment in the older generation and 60 years in the younger generation, LLFS family members performed better than their spouses on the Digit Symbol Substitution Test (DSST) and the Logical Memory test. At follow-up, family members in the younger generation also showed slower decline than spouses on the DSST, whereas rates of change of Digit Span, fluency, and memory were similar between the 2 groups.
DISCUSSION/CONCLUSION: Individuals in families with longevity appear to have better cognitive performance than their spouses for cognitive processes including psychomotor processing, episodic memory, and retrieval. Additionally, they demonstrate longer cognitive health spans with a slower decline on a multifactorial test of processing speed, a task requiring the integration of processes including organized visual search, working and incidental memory, and graphomotor ability. Long-lived families may be a valuable cohort for studying resilience to cognitive aging.
横断面分析将家族长寿与更好的认知功能相关联,并降低了与无家族长寿个体相比认知障碍的风险。长寿家族是否也表现出较慢的认知衰老速度(即随时间推移认知的变化)尚不清楚。本研究通过对长寿家族研究(LLFS)的两代人进行纵向数据收集,比较了亲属和配偶对照之间认知变化的速度。
我们使用贝叶斯层次模型分析了 LLFS 家庭成员(n=3972)与配偶对照(n=1092)之间大约 8 年收集的 6 项神经心理学测试分数的变化,该模型包括年龄、随访年限、性别、教育、代际和研究中心以及所有可能的成对交互作用。
在较老一代的入组时平均年龄为 88 岁,在较年轻一代的入组时平均年龄为 60 岁,LLFS 家庭成员在数字符号替换测试(DSST)和逻辑记忆测试上的表现优于他们的配偶。在随访期间,年轻一代的家庭成员在 DSST 上的下降速度也比配偶慢,而数字跨度、流畅性和记忆的变化率在两组之间相似。
讨论/结论:与配偶相比,长寿家族的个体在包括心理运动加工、情景记忆和提取在内的认知过程中表现出更好的认知表现。此外,他们在多因素加工速度测试上表现出更长的认知健康跨度,该测试要求整合包括有组织的视觉搜索、工作和偶然记忆以及图形运动能力在内的多个过程。长寿家族可能是研究认知衰老弹性的有价值的队列。