Farina Francesca R, Bridgeman Katie, Gregory Sarah, Crivelli Lucía, Foote Isabelle F, Jutila Otto-Emil I, Kucikova Ludmila, Mariano Luciano I, Nguyen Kim-Huong, Thayanandan Tony, Akindejoye Funmi, Butler Joe, Calandri Ismael L, Čepukaitytė Giedrė, Chiesa Scott T, Dawson Walter D, Deckers Kay, Cruz-Góngora Vanessa De la, Dounavi Maria-Eleni, Govia Ishtar, Guzmán-Vélez Edmarie, Heikal Shimaa A, Hill-Jarrett Tanisha G, Ibáñez Agustín, James Bryan D, McGlinchey Eimear, Mullin Donncha S, Muniz-Terrera Graciela, Pintado Caipa Maritza, Qansuwa Esraa M, Robinson Louise, Santuccione Chadha Antonella, Shannon Oliver M, Su Li, Weidner Wendy, Booi Laura
Pritzker School of Medicine, The University of Chicago, Chicago, IL, USA; Global Brain Health Institute (GBHI), Trinity College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland.
Edinburgh Dementia Prevention, Centre for Clinical Brain Sciences, University of Edinburgh, Edinburgh, UK.
Lancet Healthy Longev. 2024 Dec;5(12):100665. doi: 10.1016/j.lanhl.2024.100665. Epub 2024 Dec 20.
Efforts to prevent dementia can benefit from precision interventions delivered to the right population at the right time; that is, when the potential to reduce risk is the highest. Young adults (aged 18-39 years) are a neglected population in dementia research and policy making despite being highly exposed to several known modifiable risk factors. The risk and protective factors that have the biggest effect on dementia outcomes in young adulthood, and how these associations differ across regions and groups, still remain unclear. To address these uncertainties, the Next Generation Brain Health team convened a multidisciplinary expert group representing 15 nations across six continents. We identified several high-priority modifiable factors in young adulthood and devised five key recommendations for promoting brain health, ranging from individual to policy levels. Increasing research and policy focus on brain health across the life course, inclusive of younger populations, is the next crucial step in the efforts to prevent dementia at the global level.
预防痴呆症的工作可以从在正确的时间向正确的人群提供精准干预措施中受益;也就是说,在降低风险的潜力最高的时候。尽管年轻成年人(18至39岁)高度暴露于几种已知的可改变风险因素中,但在痴呆症研究和政策制定中他们是被忽视的人群。对年轻成年期痴呆症结局影响最大的风险和保护因素,以及这些关联在不同地区和群体之间如何不同,仍然不清楚。为了解决这些不确定性问题,下一代脑健康团队召集了一个代表六大洲15个国家的多学科专家组。我们确定了年轻成年期几个高度优先的可改变因素,并制定了五项促进脑健康的关键建议,范围从个人层面到政策层面。在全球范围内预防痴呆症的努力中,将研究和政策重点更多地放在包括年轻人群体在内的整个生命历程中的脑健康上,是下一步的关键举措。