Roccati Eddy, Kitsos Alex, Bindoff Aidan David, Alty Jane Elizabeth, Bartlett Larissa, Collins Jessica Marie, King Anna Elizabeth, Fair Hannah, Doherty Kathleen, Vickers James Clement
Wicking Dementia Research and Education Centre, University of Tasmania, Hobart, TAS, Australia.
Royal Hobart Hospital, Hobart, TAS, Australia.
Front Aging Neurosci. 2024 Dec 5;16:1479926. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2024.1479926. eCollection 2024.
Previous research has tended to focus on early-life education for dementia risk reduction, yet there are great gains for building cognitive reserve in mid- to later-life through educational interventions. ISLAND (Island Study Linking Ageing and Neurodegenerative Disease) Campus offered free university study to all ISLAND participants, with flexible in-person/online learning models to remove educational, socioeconomic and geographical barriers. Here the core hypothesis of ISLAND Campus was investigated: that engagement in later life education leads to improvements in modifiable risk factors for dementia, cognition and blood-based biomarkers.
ISLAND Campus participants were matched on age and gender to non-Campus participants via propensity score method, with optimal matching based on logistic regression. Participants completed online surveys on health, demographics, modifiable dementia risk factors via a customized Dementia Risk Profile (DRP) tool and provided blood samples for APOE genotyping and plasma phosphorylated-tau (p-tau). Cognition was measured online via the validated Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery Paired Associates Learning (PAL) and Spatial Working Memory (SWM) tasks. Impact of the opt-in formal educational intervention was tested in R via ANCOVA.
Total participants were 986 (interventio = 492, control = 492), mean age of 61.2 years, 73.2% female, 11.7 mean years of education and 25.0% APOE e4+. Over 4 years of follow-up, intervention participants significantly improved working memory (SWM) and their risk factor profiles as measured via the DRP ( < 0.001), indicating a significant change towards lower dementia risk. Intervention and control participants were similar on socioeconomic status, location of residence, p-tau and APOE e4 presence, however Campus participants displayed a significantly higher proportion of prior university study completion (76.0%) than controls (60.0%). Intervention participants enrolled in a variety of university degrees, the most common were Diploma of Family History ( = 103, 20.9%), Diploma of Arts ( = 74, 15.0%) and Diploma of Fine Arts ( = 52, 10.5%).
ISLAND Campus has shown how free later-life university education was associated with improvements in modifiable dementia risk factors over time and cognition. Given opt-in intervention participants were significantly more likely to have a prior university education, later life formal educational interventions should be targeted at individuals with lower prior education.
以往的研究倾向于关注早期教育以降低痴呆症风险,然而,通过教育干预在中年及老年阶段建立认知储备也能带来巨大收益。ISLAND(衰老与神经退行性疾病关联岛屿研究)校园为所有ISLAND参与者提供免费大学学习机会,采用灵活的面授/在线学习模式,以消除教育、社会经济和地理障碍。在此,对ISLAND校园的核心假设进行了研究:即参与晚年教育会使痴呆症、认知和血液生物标志物的可改变风险因素得到改善。
通过倾向得分法,根据年龄和性别将ISLAND校园参与者与非校园参与者进行匹配,并基于逻辑回归进行最优匹配。参与者通过定制的痴呆风险概况(DRP)工具完成关于健康、人口统计学、可改变的痴呆风险因素的在线调查,并提供血样进行APOE基因分型和血浆磷酸化tau蛋白(p-tau)检测。通过经过验证的剑桥神经心理测试自动成套配对联想学习(PAL)和空间工作记忆(SWM)任务在线测量认知能力。在R中通过协方差分析测试了选择加入的正规教育干预的影响。
总参与者为986人(干预组 = 492人,对照组 = 492人),平均年龄61.2岁,女性占73.2%,平均受教育年限11.7年,APOE e4+占25.0%。在4年的随访中,干预组参与者的工作记忆(SWM)以及通过DRP测量的风险因素概况有显著改善(P < 0.001),表明向较低痴呆风险有显著变化。干预组和对照组在社会经济地位、居住地点、p-tau和APOE e4存在情况方面相似,然而校园参与者完成大学学习的比例(76.0%)显著高于对照组(60.0%)。干预组参与者攻读了各种大学学位,最常见的是家族史文凭(n = 103,20.9%)、文学文凭(n = 74,15.0%)和美术文凭(n = 52,10.5%)。
ISLAND校园展示了免费的晚年大学教育如何随着时间的推移与可改变的痴呆风险因素和认知能力的改善相关联。鉴于选择加入干预的参与者更有可能有过大学教育经历,晚年正规教育干预应针对先前教育程度较低的个体。