%0 Journal Article %J Psychosom Med %D 2022 %T Associations of modifiable behavioral risk factor combinations at 65-74 years old with cognitive healthspan over 20 years. %A Smagula, Stephen F %A Biggs, Mary L %A Jacob, Mini E %A Rawlings, Andreea M %A Odden, Michelle C %A Arnold, Alice %A Newman, Anne B %A Buysse, Daniel J %X

OBJECTIVE: Behavioral risk factors for dementia tend to co-occur and inter-relate, especially poor diet, physical inactivity, sleep disturbances, and depression. Having multiple of these modifiable behavioral risk factors (MBRFs) may predict a particularly shortened cognitive healthspan, and therefore, may signal high-risk status/high intervention need.

METHODS: This secondary analyses of data from the Cardiovascular Health Study included 3149 participants aged 65-74 years (mean age = 69.5, standard deviation (SD) = 2.5; 59.6% female). MBRF exposures were self-reports regarding: (1) diet, (2) activity, (3) sleep, and (4) depression symptoms. We primarily analyzed MBRF counts. Over up to 26 years of follow-up, we assessed the: (1) number of remaining cognitively healthy life years (CHLYs); and (2) percentage of remaining life years (LYs) that were CHLYs (%CHLY). We estimated CHLYs as time before a dementia diagnosis, cognitive screener scores indicating impairment, proxy port indicating significant cognitive decline, or dementia medication use.

RESULTS: Participants averaged a remaining 16 LYs (SD = 7), 12.2 CHLYs (SD = 6.6), and 78.1% of LYs being CHLYs (SD = 25.6). Compared with having no MBRFs, having one was associated with ~1 less LY and CHLY, but not a relatively lower %CHLY. In contrast, having 3+ MBRFs was associated with about 2-3 fewer LYs and CHLYs as well as about 6% lower %CHLY (95% confidence interval: -9.0, -2.5 %CHLYs), p = 0.001).

CONCLUSIONS: MBRF-related reductions in the cognitive healthspan are most apparent when people have multiple MBRFs. Future research is needed to determine if/how behavioral risks converge mechanistically, and if dementia prevention efficacy improves when targeting MBRF combinations.

%B Psychosom Med %8 2022 Jun 28 %G eng %R 10.1097/PSY.0000000000001100