Batty G David, Bell Steven, Kujala Urho M, Sarna Seppo J, Kaprio Jaakko
Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, University College London, London, UK.
Precision Breast Cancer Institute, Department of Oncology, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
medRxiv. 2024 Jan 16:2024.01.15.24301327. doi: 10.1101/2024.01.15.24301327.
The elevated dementia incidence in retired contact sport participants might be explained by a higher prevalence of established risk factors for the disease relative to the general population.
In this cohort study, former elite participants active between 1920 and 1965 in soccer (N=303), boxing (N=281), and wrestling (N=318) were recruited using sports yearbooks and records of sports associations. Men in a population control group were identified using records from a compulsory medical examination (N=1712). All study members were linked to hospital registers (1970-2015) and self-completion questionnaires were circulated (1985, 1995) from which we captured data on nine established risk factors for dementia: hypertension and diabetes status, alcohol intake, loneliness, depressive symptoms, cigarette smoking, body weight, educational attainment, and physical activity.
There was little suggestion that former participants in contact sports had a higher prevalence of dementia risk factors relative to the general population. Rather, the balance of evidence was for more favourable risk factor levels in former athletes, as was particularly evident for ever having smoked cigarettes (range in odds ratios [95% confidence interval]: 0.32 [0.21, 0.48] for wrestling to 0.52 [0.36, 0.75] for soccer) and leisure-time physical activity (range in beta coefficients [95% confidence interval]: 1.34 [0.66, 2.02] for soccer to 1.80 [1.07, 2.52] for boxing).
The increased dementia rates in retired contact sport participants evident in epidemiological studies is unlikely to be explained by the risk factors examined here. This implicates other characteristics of contact sports, including a history of repeated head impact.
退休的接触性运动参与者中痴呆症发病率升高,可能是因为与普通人群相比,该疾病既定风险因素的患病率更高。
在这项队列研究中,利用体育年鉴和体育协会记录招募了1920年至1965年间活跃的前精英足球运动员(N = 303)、拳击运动员(N = 281)和摔跤运动员(N = 318)。通过义务体检记录确定了一个人群对照组中的男性(N = 1712)。所有研究成员均与医院登记册(1970 - 2015年)相关联,并发放了自填式问卷(1985年、1995年),从中我们获取了关于痴呆症九个既定风险因素的数据:高血压和糖尿病状况、酒精摄入量、孤独感、抑郁症状、吸烟、体重、教育程度和身体活动。
几乎没有迹象表明接触性运动的前参与者相对于普通人群有更高的痴呆症风险因素患病率。相反,证据的平衡显示前运动员的风险因素水平更有利,这在曾经吸烟方面尤为明显(比值比[95%置信区间]范围:摔跤为0.32[0.21, 0.48],足球为0.52[0.36, 0.75])以及休闲时间身体活动方面(β系数[95%置信区间]范围:足球为1.34[0.66, 2.02],拳击为1.80[1.07, 2.52])。
流行病学研究中退休接触性运动参与者痴呆症发病率增加,不太可能由这里所研究的风险因素来解释。这意味着接触性运动的其他特征,包括反复头部撞击史。