Department of Epidemiology, Fielding School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles.
Department of Community Health Sciences, Fielding School of Public Health, University of California, Los Angeles.
JAMA Netw Open. 2023 Mar 1;6(3):e231661. doi: 10.1001/jamanetworkopen.2023.1661.
High education protects against dementia, but returns on educational attainment may be different across sociodemographic groups owing to various social factors. Asian American individuals are a growing and diverse group, but little research has assessed dementia determinants in this population.
To examine the association of education with dementia in a large cohort of Asian American individuals, stratifying by ethnicity and nativity.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This cohort study used electronic health record (EHR) and survey data from the Research Program on Genes, Environment, and Health and the California Men's Health Study surveys (2002-2020). Data are from Kaiser Permanente Northern California, an integrated health care delivery system. This study used a volunteer sample who completed the surveys. Participants included Chinese, Filipino, and Japanese individuals who were aged 60 to less than 90 years without a dementia diagnosis in the EHR at the time of the survey (baseline) and who had 2 years of health plan coverage before baseline. Data analysis was performed from December 2021 to December 2022.
The main exposure was educational attainment (college degree or higher vs less than a college degree), and the main stratification variables were Asian ethnicity and nativity (born in the US or born outside the US).
The primary outcome was incident dementia diagnosis in the EHR. Dementia incidence rates were estimated by ethnicity and nativity, and Cox proportional hazards and Aalen additive hazards models were fitted for the association of college degree or higher vs less than a college degree with time to dementia, adjusting for age (timescale), sex, nativity, and an interaction between nativity and college degree.
Among 14 749 individuals, the mean (SD) age at baseline was 70.6 (7.3) years, 8174 (55.4%) were female, and 6931 (47.0%) had attained a college degree. Overall, among individuals born in the US, those with a college degree had 12% lower dementia incidence (HR, 0.88; 95% CI, 0.75-1.03) compared with those without at least a college degree, although the confidence interval included the null. The HR for individuals born outside the US was 0.82 (95% CI, 0.72-0.92; P = .46 for the college degree by nativity interaction). The findings were similar across ethnicity and nativity groups except for Japanese individuals born outside the US.
These findings suggest that college degree attainment was associated with lower dementia incidence, with similar associations across nativity. More work is needed to understand determinants of dementia in Asian American individuals and to elucidate mechanisms linking educational attainment and dementia.
高等教育可以预防痴呆症,但由于各种社会因素,不同社会人口群体的教育回报可能有所不同。亚裔美国人是一个不断增长且多样化的群体,但很少有研究评估这个群体的痴呆症决定因素。
在一个大型亚裔美国人队列中,按族裔和出生地对教育与痴呆症的关系进行分层分析。
设计、地点和参与者:这项队列研究使用了来自基因、环境和健康研究计划以及加利福尼亚男性健康研究调查的电子健康记录 (EHR) 和调查数据(2002-2020 年)。数据来自 Kaiser Permanente 北加利福尼亚,这是一个综合医疗服务提供系统。本研究使用了志愿者样本,他们完成了调查。参与者包括年龄在 60 岁至 89 岁之间、EHR 中无痴呆症诊断(基线时)且在基线前有 2 年健康计划覆盖的中国、菲律宾和日本裔人士。数据分析于 2021 年 12 月至 2022 年 12 月进行。
主要暴露因素是教育程度(大学学位或以上与未获得大学学位),主要分层变量是族裔和出生地(在美国出生或在美国境外出生)。
主要结局是 EHR 中痴呆症的新发病例。根据族裔和出生地估计痴呆症的发病率,并使用 Cox 比例风险和 Aalen 加法风险模型拟合大学学位或以上与未获得大学学位与痴呆症发病时间之间的关联,调整年龄(时间尺度)、性别、出生地和出生地与大学学位之间的交互作用。
在 14749 名参与者中,基线时的平均(标准差)年龄为 70.6(7.3)岁,8174 名(55.4%)为女性,6931 名(47.0%)获得了大学学位。总体而言,在美国出生的人群中,与未获得至少大学学位的人群相比,拥有大学学位的人群痴呆症发病率低 12%(HR,0.88;95%CI,0.75-1.03),尽管置信区间包含零值。对于在境外出生的人,HR 为 0.82(95%CI,0.72-0.92;P=0.46 用于检验大学学位与出生地的交互作用)。除了在美国境外出生的日本人之外,这些发现与族裔和出生地群体基本一致。
这些发现表明,大学学位与较低的痴呆症发病率相关,与出生地的关联相似。需要进一步研究以了解亚裔美国人痴呆症的决定因素,并阐明教育程度与痴呆症之间的关联机制。