Department of Neurology, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, Illinois, USA
Center for Circadian and Sleep Medicine, Northwestern University Feinberg School of Medicine, Chicago, IL, USA.
BMJ Open. 2023 Feb 23;13(2):e071899. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2023-071899.
The lack of definitive means to prevent or treat cognitive impairment or dementia is driving intense efforts to identify causal mechanisms. Recent evidence suggests clinically meaningful declines in cognition might present as early as middle age. Studying cognitive changes in middle adulthood could elucidate modifiable factors affecting later cognitive and health outcomes, yet few cognitive ageing studies include this age group. The purpose of the MidCog study is to begin investigations of less-studied and potentially modifiable midlife determinants of later life cognitive outcomes.
MidCog is a prospective cohort study of adults ages 35-64, with two in-person interviews 2.5 years apart. Data will be collected from interviews, electronic health records and pharmacy fill data. Measurements will include health literacy, self-management skills, cognitive function, lifestyle and health behaviours, healthcare use, health status and chronic disease outcomes. Associations of health literacy and self-management skills with health behaviours and cognitive/health outcomes will be examined in a series of regression models, and moderating effects of modifiable psychosocial factors.Finally, MidCog data will be linked to an ongoing, parallel cohort study of older adults recruited at ages 55-74 in 2008 ('LitCog'; ages 70-90 in 2023), to explore associations between age, health literacy, self-management skills, chronic diseases, health status and cognitive function among adults ages 35-90.
The Institutional Review Board at Northwestern University has approved the MidCog study protocol (STU00214736). Results will be published in peer-reviewed journals and summaries will be provided to the funders of the study as well as patients.
缺乏明确的方法来预防或治疗认知障碍或痴呆症,这促使人们积极努力寻找因果机制。最近的证据表明,认知能力的明显下降可能早在中年就出现了。研究中年期的认知变化可以阐明影响以后认知和健康结果的可改变因素,但很少有认知老化研究包括这一年龄组。MidCog 研究的目的是开始研究中年时期对以后生活认知结果有影响的、研究较少和潜在可改变的因素。
MidCog 是一项针对 35-64 岁成年人的前瞻性队列研究,两次面对面访谈时间间隔 2.5 年。将从访谈、电子健康记录和药房配药数据中收集数据。测量内容包括健康素养、自我管理技能、认知功能、生活方式和健康行为、医疗保健使用、健康状况和慢性疾病结果。将通过一系列回归模型来检查健康素养和自我管理技能与健康行为和认知/健康结果之间的关联,并检验可改变的心理社会因素的调节作用。最后,MidCog 数据将与一项正在进行的、针对 2008 年招募的年龄在 55-74 岁的老年成年人(“LitCog”;年龄在 70-90 岁的成年人在 2023 年)的平行队列研究进行链接,以探索年龄、健康素养、自我管理技能、慢性病、健康状况和认知功能之间的关联在 35-90 岁的成年人中。
西北大学的机构审查委员会已经批准了 MidCog 研究方案(STU00214736)。研究结果将发表在同行评议的期刊上,并将向研究的资助者以及患者提供摘要。