Social connections and risk of incident mild cognitive impairment, dementia, and mortality in 13 longitudinal cohort studies of ageing.

TitleSocial connections and risk of incident mild cognitive impairment, dementia, and mortality in 13 longitudinal cohort studies of ageing.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2023
AuthorsMahalingam G, Samtani S, Lam BChun Pan, Lipnicki DM, Lima-Costa MFernanda, Blay SLuis, Castro-Costa E, Shifu X, Guerchet M, Preux P-M, Gbessemehlan A, Skoog I, Najar J, Sterner TRydberg, Scarmeas N, Yannakoulia M, Dardiotis T, Kim K-W, Riedel-Heller S, Röhr S, Pabst A, Shahar S, Numbers K, Ganguli M, Hughes TF, Chang C-CH, Crowe M, Ng TPin, Gwee X, Chua DQian Ling, Rymaszewska J, Wolf-Ostermann K, Welmer A-K, Stafford J, Mélis R, Vernooij-Dassen M, Jeon Y-H, Sachdev PS, Brodaty H
Corporate AuthorsSHARED consortium for the Cohort Studies of Memory in an International Consortium(COSMIC)
JournalAlzheimers Dement
Date Published2023 Apr 27
ISSN1552-5279
Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Previous meta-analyses have linked social connections and mild cognitive impairment, dementia, and mortality. However, these used aggregate data from North America and Europe and examined a limited number of social connection markers.

METHODS: We used individual participant data (N = 39271, M  = 70.67 (40-102), 58.86% female, M  = 8.43 years, M  = 3.22 years) from 13 longitudinal ageing studies. A two-stage meta-analysis of Cox regression models examined the association between social connection markers with our primary outcomes.

RESULTS: We found associations between good social connections structure and quality and lower risk of incident mild cognitive impairment (MCI); between social structure and function and lower risk of incident dementia and mortality. Only in Asian cohorts, being married/in a relationship was associated with reduced risk of dementia, and having a confidante was associated with reduced risk of dementia and mortality.

DISCUSSION: Different aspects of social connections - structure, function, and quality - are associated with benefits for healthy aging internationally.

HIGHLIGHTS: Social connection structure (being married/in a relationship, weekly community group engagement, weekly family/friend interactions) and quality (never lonely) were associated with lower risk of incident MCI. Social connection structure (monthly/weekly friend/family interactions) and function (having a confidante) were associated with lower risk of incident dementia. Social connection structure (living with others, yearly/monthly/weekly community group engagement) and function (having a confidante) were associated with lower risk of mortality. Evidence from 13 longitudinal cohort studies of ageing indicates that social connections are important targets for reducing risk of incident MCI, incident dementia, and mortality. Only in Asian cohorts, being married/in a relationship was associated with reduced risk of dementia, and having a confidante was associated with reduced risk of dementia and mortality.

URLhttps://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/37102417/
DOI10.1002/alz.13072
Alternate JournalAlzheimers Dement
PubMed ID37102417
Country: 
Method: 
Quantitative
Design: 
PLACI vs PLOCI