Soria-Contreras Diana C, Wang Siwen, Liu Jiaxuan, Lawn Rebecca B, Mitsunami Makiko, Purdue-Smithe Alexandra C, Zhang Cuilin, Oken Emily, Chavarro Jorge E
Department of Nutrition, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Department of Epidemiology, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA, USA.
Diabetologia. 2025 Jan;68(1):105-115. doi: 10.1007/s00125-024-06270-w. Epub 2024 Sep 6.
AIMS/HYPOTHESIS: We aimed to determine whether a history of gestational diabetes mellitus (GDM) is associated with cognitive function in midlife.
We conducted a secondary data analysis of the prospective Nurses' Health Study II. From 1989 to 2001, and then in 2009, participants reported their history of GDM. A subset participated in a cognition sub-study in 2014-2019 (wave 1) or 2018-2022 (wave 2). We included 15,906 parous participants (≥1 birth at ≥18 years) who completed a cognitive assessment and were free of CVD, cancer and diabetes before their first birth. The primary exposure was a history of GDM. Additionally, we studied exposure to GDM and subsequent type 2 diabetes mellitus (neither GDM nor type 2 diabetes, GDM only, type 2 diabetes only or GDM followed by type 2 diabetes) and conducted mediation analysis by type 2 diabetes. The outcomes were composite z scores measuring psychomotor speed/attention, learning/working memory and global cognition obtained with the Cogstate brief battery. Mean differences (β and 95% CI) in cognitive function by GDM were estimated using linear regression.
The 15,906 participants were a mean of 62.0 years (SD 4.9) at cognitive assessment, and 4.7% (n=749) had a history of GDM. In models adjusted for age at cognitive assessment, race and ethnicity, education, wave of enrolment in the cognition sub-study, socioeconomic status and pre-pregnancy characteristics, women with a history of GDM had lower performance in psychomotor speed/attention (β -0.08; 95% CI -0.14, -0.01) and global cognition (β -0.06; 95% CI -0.11, -0.01) than those without a history of GDM. The lower cognitive performance in women with GDM was only partially explained by the development of type 2 diabetes.
CONCLUSIONS/INTERPRETATION: Women with a history of GDM had poorer cognition than those without GDM. If replicated, our findings support future research on early risk modification strategies for women with a history of GDM as a potential avenue to decrease their risk of cognitive impairment.
目的/假设:我们旨在确定妊娠糖尿病(GDM)病史是否与中年时期的认知功能相关。
我们对前瞻性护士健康研究II进行了二次数据分析。从1989年至2001年,然后在2009年,参与者报告了他们的GDM病史。一部分参与者在2014 - 2019年(第1波)或2018 - 2022年(第2波)参加了认知子研究。我们纳入了15906名经产妇(≥18岁时有≥1次生育),她们完成了认知评估,并且在首次生育前没有心血管疾病、癌症和糖尿病。主要暴露因素是GDM病史。此外,我们研究了GDM暴露及随后的2型糖尿病情况(既无GDM也无2型糖尿病、仅患GDM、仅患2型糖尿病或GDM后发展为2型糖尿病),并按2型糖尿病进行了中介分析。结局指标是使用Cogstate简版测试获得的综合z评分,用于衡量心理运动速度/注意力、学习/工作记忆和整体认知。使用线性回归估计GDM组与非GDM组在认知功能方面的平均差异(β和95%CI)。
15906名参与者在认知评估时的平均年龄为62.0岁(标准差4.9),4.7%(n = 749)有GDM病史。在根据认知评估时的年龄、种族和族裔、教育程度、认知子研究的入组波次、社会经济地位和孕前特征进行调整的模型中,有GDM病史的女性在心理运动速度/注意力(β -0.08;95%CI -0.14,-0.01)和整体认知(β -0.06;95%CI -0.11,-0.01)方面的表现低于无GDM病史的女性。GDM女性较低的认知表现仅部分由2型糖尿病的发生所解释。
结论/解读:有GDM病史的女性比无GDM病史的女性认知能力更差。如果得到重复验证,我们的研究结果支持未来针对有GDM病史女性的早期风险修正策略的研究,这可能是降低她们认知障碍风险的一条途径。