Hunter Ruth F, Cleland Claire, Trott Mike, O'Neill Sean, Küçükali Hüseyin, Mullineaux Shay, Kee Frank, McKinley Jennifer M, Neville Charlotte, O'Hara Leeanne, Marr Calum, McAlinden Michael, Ellis Geraint, McKnight Amy, Schipperijn Jasper, McHugh Power Joanna, Duong Trung, McGuinness Bernadette
Centre for Public Health, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, UK
Centre for Public Health, Queen's University Belfast, Belfast, UK.
BMJ Open. 2024 Dec 10;14(12):e085318. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2024-085318.
Maintaining cognitive health in later life is a global priority. Encouraging individuals to make health behaviour changes, such as regular physical activity, and providing supportive urban environments can help maintain cognitive health, thereby preventing or delaying the progress of dementia and cognitive decline. However, the mechanistic pathways by which the urban environmental exposome influences cognitive health outcomes are poorly understood. The aim of this study is to use granular measures of the urban environment exposome (encompassing the built, natural and social environment) and physical activity to explore how these interact with a person's biology to ultimately influence cognitive health outcomes.
This ongoing study uses a cohort design, recruiting participants from the Northern Ireland Cohort for the Longitudinal study of Ageing and the Harmonised Cognitive Assessment Protocol study. Participants (n=400 at each wave) will be aged ≥65 years and have the capacity to provide written informed consent. Measures include device-measured physical activity (Actigraph wGT3XP-BT), environmental location data (Global Positioning System, Qstarz BT-Q1000XT), linked to a battery of neuropsychological tests, including the Mini Mental State Examination and the Centre for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale. Blood-derived biochemical, genetic and epigenetic data will be included in multimodal analyses. These data will be integrated with urban environment Geographic Information System data and analysed using causal inference and mediation methods to investigate plausible mechanistic pathways.
This study has been approved by the Queen's University Belfast, Faculty of Medicine, Health and Life Sciences Research Ethics Committee (MHLS 21_72). Alongside peer-reviewed publications in high-ranking international journals, dissemination activities include conference presentations, project videos, working papers, policy briefing papers, newsletters, summaries and case study stories.
维持晚年的认知健康是一项全球优先事项。鼓励个人做出健康行为改变,如定期进行体育活动,并提供支持性的城市环境,有助于维持认知健康,从而预防或延缓痴呆症和认知衰退的进展。然而,城市环境暴露组影响认知健康结果的机制途径尚不清楚。本研究的目的是使用城市环境暴露组(包括建筑、自然和社会环境)和体育活动的精细测量方法,探讨这些因素如何与个体生物学相互作用,最终影响认知健康结果。
这项正在进行的研究采用队列设计,从北爱尔兰老龄化纵向研究队列和统一认知评估协议研究中招募参与者。参与者(每轮n = 400)年龄≥65岁,并有能力提供书面知情同意书。测量方法包括通过设备测量的体育活动(Actigraph wGT3XP - BT)、环境位置数据(全球定位系统,Qstarz BT - Q1000XT),并与一系列神经心理学测试相关联,包括简易精神状态检查表和流行病学研究中心抑郁量表。血液衍生的生化、遗传和表观遗传数据将纳入多模态分析。这些数据将与城市环境地理信息系统数据整合,并使用因果推断和中介方法进行分析,以研究可能的机制途径。
本研究已获得贝尔法斯特女王大学医学、健康与生命科学学院研究伦理委员会批准(MHLS 21_72)。除了在高排名国际期刊上发表同行评审论文外,传播活动还包括会议报告、项目视频、工作论文、政策简报文件、时事通讯、摘要和案例研究故事。