Wu Jing, Yin Xiangjun, Ji Weiqiang, Liu Yang, Tang Jing, Zhang Han, Qi Shige, Li Jie, Lin Li, Yang Xueqing, Xu Chengdong, Du Qingfeng
National Center for Chronic and Noncommunicable Disease Control and Prevention, Chinese Center for Disease Control and Prevention, Beijing, 100050, China.
Guangdong Basic Research Center of Excellence for Integrated Traditional and Western Medicine for Qingzhi Diseases, Guangzhou, 510515, China.
Alzheimers Res Ther. 2025 May 30;17(1):120. doi: 10.1186/s13195-025-01761-3.
Cognitive impairment, hypertension and diabetes are prevalent chronic conditions in populations of older ages. Previous studies have shown that hypertension and diabetes are risk factors for the development of cognitive impairment. However, the impact of hypertension combined with diabetes (HD) and their cumulative effects on cognitive impairment remain unclear. We aimed to investigate whether HD influences development of cognitive impairment and whether the effect is cumulative.
A case-control study was conducted. From 40,103 subjects aged 60 years or older, enrolled from 28 representative communities of 9 provinces of China between January 2015 and December 2021 into the Prevention and Intervention on Neurodegenerative Disease for Elderly in China program using multi-stage stratified random sampling, individuals not meeting our propensity score matching criteria were excluded, and 13,252 individuals were finally selected for the study. Exposure factors included hypertension, diabetes and their comorbidity. Odds ratios (ORs) of exposure factors on cognitive impairment were measured using multiple logistic regression.
We found significant impacts of hypertension, diabetes and their comorbidity on cognitive impairment occurrence. The OR values for dementia were 1.18 for individuals with hypertension only, 1.26 for those with diabetes only, and 1.53 for those with HD. Compared to participants without hypertension and diabetes, the OR values for mild cognitive impairment (MCI) were 1.11 for individuals with hypertension only, 1.32 for those with diabetes only, and 1.27 for those with HD. For subjects with HD longer than 5 years, the comorbidity significantly impacted on MCI and dementia, and the degree of impact increased with the duration of comorbidity. For hypertension, the influence of hypertension on dementia were most influential in middle-aged (45-64 years old) people. By contrast, the influence of diabetes on people younger than 45-year-old was most significant, with the middle-age group being the second most impacted subjects.
The elderly with HD have a heightened risk of developing cognitive impairment, particularly dementia, compared to those with either hypertension or diabetes alone. The study revealed a significant cumulative impact of HD on cognitive impairment.
认知障碍、高血压和糖尿病是老年人群中普遍存在的慢性疾病。先前的研究表明,高血压和糖尿病是认知障碍发生发展的危险因素。然而,高血压合并糖尿病(HD)及其对认知障碍的累积影响仍不明确。我们旨在研究HD是否会影响认知障碍的发生发展,以及这种影响是否具有累积性。
进行了一项病例对照研究。从2015年1月至2021年12月期间,通过多阶段分层随机抽样从中国9个省份的28个代表性社区招募的40103名60岁及以上的受试者中,排除不符合倾向得分匹配标准的个体,最终选取13252名个体进行研究。暴露因素包括高血压、糖尿病及其合并症。使用多因素逻辑回归分析暴露因素对认知障碍的比值比(OR)。
我们发现高血压、糖尿病及其合并症对认知障碍的发生有显著影响。仅患有高血压的个体患痴呆症的OR值为1.18,仅患有糖尿病的个体为1.26,患有HD的个体为1.53。与无高血压和糖尿病的参与者相比,仅患有高血压的个体发生轻度认知障碍(MCI)的OR值为1.11,仅患有糖尿病的个体为1.32,患有HD的个体为1.27。对于HD病程超过5年的受试者,合并症对MCI和痴呆症有显著影响,且影响程度随合并症病程的延长而增加。对于高血压,高血压对痴呆症的影响在中年(45 - 64岁)人群中最为显著。相比之下,糖尿病对45岁以下人群的影响最为显著,中年人群是受影响第二大的群体。
与单独患有高血压或糖尿病的老年人相比,患有HD的老年人发生认知障碍尤其是痴呆症的风险更高。该研究揭示了HD对认知障碍有显著的累积影响。