Outcome age-based prediction of successful cognitive aging by total cholesterol.

Pubmed ID: 29514768

Pubmed Central ID: PMC6050071

Journal: Alzheimer's & dementia : the journal of the Alzheimer's Association

Publication Date: July 1, 2018

MeSH Terms: Humans, Male, Female, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Hydroxymethylglutaryl-CoA Reductase Inhibitors, Risk Factors, Longitudinal Studies, Survival Analysis, Prognosis, Time Factors, Cholesterol, Dementia, Cognitive Aging, Cognitive Dysfunction

Grants: R21 TW009258, I01 CX000900, P50 AG005138

Authors: Silverman JM, Schmeidler J

Cite As: Silverman JM, Schmeidler J. Outcome age-based prediction of successful cognitive aging by total cholesterol. Alzheimers Dement 2018 Jul;14(7):952-960. Epub 2018 Mar 5.

Studies:

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Some associations of high total cholesterol with dementia risk diminish as the outcome age-age at cognitive assessment-increases. METHODS: The Framingham Heart Study provided 1897 participants with intact cognition at entry. Cox regression analysis for incident marked cognitive decline included "time-dependent" coefficients, with associations between total cholesterol and covariates changing by outcome age. Decline within age categories of 75-84 and 85-94 years was also examined. RESULTS: Significant associations of rising total cholesterol linear slope, low entry age, low education, and statin nonuse with risk diminished significantly by outcome age. At 85-94 years, falling linear slope was significant. DISCUSSION: The protected survival model posits a minority subpopulation with protection against mortality and cognitive decline associated with total cholesterol risk factors. It predicts the observed diminished or reversed cholesterol associations with increasing age. Protection is particularly likely for successful cognitive aging-intact cognition at very old age-despite increased risk from cholesterol.