Exposome-wide association study of cognition among older adults in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey.

Exposome Pub Date : 2025-01-28 eCollection Date: 2025-01-01 DOI:10.1093/exposome/osaf002
Lauren Y M Middleton, Erika Walker, Scarlet Cockell, John Dou, Vy K Nguyen, Mitchell Schrank, Chirag J Patel, Erin B Ware, Justin A Colacino, Sung Kyun Park, Kelly M Bakulski
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Abstract

Cognitive impairment among older adults is a growing public health challenge and environmental chemicals may be modifiable risk factors. A wide array of chemicals has not yet been tested for association with cognition in an environment-wide association framework. In the US National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) 1999-2000 and 2011-2014 cross-sectional cycles, cognition was assessed using the Digit Symbol Substitution Test (DSST, scores 0-117) among participants aged 60 years and older. Concentrations of environmental chemicals measured in blood or urine were log2 transformed and standardized. Chemicals with at least 50% of measures above the lower limit of detection were included (nchemicals = 147, nclasses=14). We tested for associations between chemical concentrations and cognition using parallel survey-weighted multivariable linear regression models adjusted for age, sex, race/ethnicity, education, smoking status, fish consumption, cycle year, urinary creatinine, and cotinine. Participants with at least one chemical measurement (n = 4982) were mean age 69.8 years, 55.0% female, 78.2% non-Hispanic White, and 77.0% at least high school educated. The mean DSST score was 50.4 (standard deviation (SD)=17.4). In adjusted analyses, 5 of 147 exposures were associated with DSST at P-value <.01. Notably, a SD increase in log2-scaled cotinine concentration was associated with 2.71 points lower DSST score (95% CI -3.69, -1.73). A SD increase in log2-scaled urinary tungsten concentration was associated with 1.34 points lower DSST score (95% CI -2.11, -0.56). Exposure to environmental chemicals, particularly metals and tobacco smoke, may be modifiable factors for cognition among older adults.

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Exposome-wide association study of cognition among older adults in the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey. An evolutionary perspective for the exposome. Use, limitations, and future directions of mixtures approaches to understand the health impacts of weather- and climate change-related exposures, an under-studied aspect of the exposome. Exposomics: perfection not required. A long and winding road: Culture change on data sharing in exposomics
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