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Diabetes in mid-life and cognitive change over 20 years

We have known for some time that people with diabetes have a greater risk of dementia than those without diabetes, with vascular damage the key underlying process in both conditions. This new article reinforces the message that type 2 diabetes in mid-life is also associated with an increased long-term risk of dementia. The analysis has drawn on a large cohort from the community-based ARIC (Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities) study. Diabetes in mid-life was found to be associated with a 19% greater cognitive decline over 20 years and this was worse where there was persistently poor diabetes control.

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by Colin Kenny, GP, Dromore

 

This large cohort analysis from the community-based ARIC (Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities) study was initially set up to document racial disparities in renal function over time in people with diabetes, but it has now been used to document cognitive decline in the same cohort. In all, 13,351 black and white adults aged 48–67 years at baseline (between 1990 and 1992) were included. Diabetes and pre-diabetes incidence was documented at study entry (using HbA1c), and cognitive tools were used to measure progress to dementia.

When data were analysed, two outcomes were clear: diabetes in mid-life was associated with a 19% greater cognitive decline over 20 years compared with no diabetes; and participants with poorly controlled diabetes (HbA1c level ≥53 mmol/mol [≥7.0%]) had greater decline than those whose diabetes was better controlled. In addition, the degree of cognitive decline was significantly greater among persons with pre-diabetes (HbA1c level of 39–46 mmol/mol [5.7–6.4%]) than among those with an HbA1c level less than 39 mmol/mol. There were no racial differences in cognitive decline, but longer-duration diabetes was also associated with greater late-life cognitive decline.

To access the full publication, click here (not open access)

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