Rojas-Saunero L Paloma, Zhou Yixuan, Hayes-Larson Eleanor, Wu Yingyan, Mobley Taylor, Nianogo Roch A, Elser Holly, Gee Gilbert C, Brookmeyer Ron, Whitmer Rachel, Gilsanz Paola, Mayeda Elizabeth Rose
Department of Epidemiology, UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, Los Angeles, CA.
Department of Biostatistics, UCLA Fielding School of Public Health, Los Angeles, CA.
Neurology. 2025 Apr 8;104(7):e213488. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0000000000213488. Epub 2025 Mar 6.
Limited evidence exists on stroke incidence and its impact on dementia risk in Asian American older adults, a population with lower dementia risk than other racial and ethnic groups. We aimed to estimate the cumulative incidence of stroke and assess its effect on dementia risk over 10 years among Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, South Asian, and non-Latino White older adults in Northern California.
This cohort study included Kaiser Permanente Northern California members who participated in surveys between 2002 and 2009 with linked electronic health record data through 2020. We included Chinese, Filipino, Japanese, South Asian, and non-Latino White participants aged 60-89 years without history of stroke or dementia at the time of survey (baseline). Incident stroke and incident dementia were identified using International Classification of Diseases codes. We estimated the cause-specific cumulative incidence of stroke at 10 years of follow-up using the Aalen-Johansen estimator. We estimated the effect of incident stroke on dementia risk with risk ratios and risk differences from a weighted Kaplan-Meier survival estimator. We used time-varying inverse probability weights to adjust for confounding and censoring due to loss to follow-up and death. In secondary analyses, we restricted the exposure to ischemic stroke.
We included 147,986 participants (Chinese [n = 6,034], Filipino [n = 4,649], Japanese [n = 3,099], South Asian [n = 996], non-Latino White [n = 133,208]); the mean baseline age ranged from 69 to 72 years, and the percentage of female participants ranged from 40% to 63% across groups. The 10-year cumulative incidence of stroke (95% CIs) ranged from 10.7% (9.9%-11.6%) for Chinese participants to 13.7% (12.4%-15.2%) for Japanese participants. Risk ratios relating incident stroke and dementia risk at 10 years of follow-up were 4.3 (3.0-6.4) for Chinese participants, 3.3 (2.2-4.6) for Filipino participants, 4.6 (2.5-6.6) for Japanese participants, 5.4 (1.5-12.4) for South Asian participants, and 2.9 (2.7-3.2) for non-Latino White participants. Restricting analyses to ischemic stroke yielded similar results.
Stroke incidence is high among Asian American and non-Latino White older adults and is associated with increased dementia risk in all groups. Future research needs to disentangle the pathophysiologic mechanisms involved in the acute event of stroke that trigger and accelerate dementia onset.
关于美国亚裔老年人中风发病率及其对痴呆风险影响的证据有限,该人群痴呆风险低于其他种族和族裔群体。我们旨在估计加利福尼亚北部华裔、菲律宾裔、日裔、南亚裔和非拉丁裔白人老年人中风的累积发病率,并评估其在10年内对痴呆风险的影响。
这项队列研究纳入了2002年至2009年期间参与调查且通过2020年电子健康记录数据相链接的北加利福尼亚凯撒医疗集团成员。我们纳入了年龄在60 - 89岁之间、在调查时(基线)无中风或痴呆病史的华裔、菲律宾裔、日裔、南亚裔和非拉丁裔白人参与者。使用国际疾病分类代码识别新发中风和新发痴呆。我们使用Aalen-Johansen估计量估计随访10年时特定病因的中风累积发病率。我们使用加权Kaplan-Meier生存估计量的风险比和风险差异估计新发中风对痴呆风险的影响。我们使用随时间变化的逆概率权重来调整因失访和死亡导致的混杂和删失。在二次分析中,我们将暴露限制为缺血性中风。
我们纳入了147,986名参与者(华裔[n = 6,034]、菲律宾裔[n = 4,649]、日裔[n = 3,099]、南亚裔[n = 996]、非拉丁裔白人[n = 133,208]);平均基线年龄在69至72岁之间,各群体女性参与者的比例在40%至63%之间。中风的10年累积发病率(95%置信区间)在华裔参与者中为10.7%(9.9% - 11.6%),在日裔参与者中为13.7%(12.4% - 15.2%)。随访10年时,与新发中风和痴呆风险相关的风险比在华裔参与者中为4.3(3.0 - 6.4),在菲律宾裔参与者中为3.3(2.2 - 4.6),在日裔参与者中为4.6(2.5 - 6.6),在南亚裔参与者中为5.4(1.5 - 12.4),在非拉丁裔白人参与者中为2.9(2.7 - 3.2)。将分析限制为缺血性中风产生了类似的结果。
美国亚裔和非拉丁裔白人老年人中风发病率较高,且在所有群体中都与痴呆风险增加相关。未来的研究需要理清中风急性事件中触发和加速痴呆发病的病理生理机制。