50 岁及以上人群的社会健康和后续认知功能:在两项欧洲纵向研究中考察抑郁症状和炎症生物标志物的中介作用

IF 13.4 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY Lancet Healthy Longevity Pub Date : 2024-05-01 DOI:10.1016/S2666-7568(24)00046-1
Jean Stafford PhD , Serhiy Dekhtyar PhD , Anna-Karin Welmer PhD , Davide L Vetrano PhD , Giulia Grande PhD , Erika J Laukka PhD , Anna Marseglia PhD , Vanessa Moulton PhD , Rosie Mansfield PhD , Yiwen Liu PhD , Ke Ning PhD , Prof Karin Wolf-Ostermann PhD , Prof Henry Brodaty DSc , Suraj Samtani PhD , Prof Mohammad Arfan Ikram PhD , René Melis PhD , Prof Joanna Rymaszewska PhD , Dorota Szcześniak PhD , Giorgio Di Gessa PhD , Prof Marcus Richards PhD , Jane Maddock PhD
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景社会健康指标(包括婚姻状况、接触频率、网络规模和社会支持)已被证明与认知相关。然而,人们对这些关联的机制仍然知之甚少。我们调查了抑郁症状和炎症是否介导了社会健康与后续认知之间的关联。方法在英国的一项具有全国代表性的纵向研究--英国老龄化纵向研究(ELSA)中,我们抽取了 7136 名年龄在 50 岁或以上、在基线或中间介导评估时间点生活在私人家庭中且没有痴呆症的人,他们至少记录了一项社会健康指标和潜在介导因素的信息。我们使用四向分解法来研究抑郁症状、C 反应蛋白和纤维蛋白原在多大程度上介导了社会健康与随后的标准化认知(言语流畅性、延迟和即时回忆)之间的关联,包括认知变化,其斜率来自多层次模型(12 年斜率)。我们以 2604 名 60 岁或 60 岁以上、在家中或机构中生活的 Kungsholmen(斯德哥尔摩市中心)老年人为样本,在基线或中间介导评估时间点(6 年斜率)没有痴呆症的瑞典 Kungsholmen 老龄化与护理国家研究 (SNAC-K)(一项基于瑞典人口的纵向研究)中检验了研究结果是否得到了复制。社会健康风险在基线时进行评估,潜在中介因素在中间时间点(ELSA 的第 2 波和 SNAC-K 的 6 年随访)进行评估;认知结果在单一时间点(ELSA 的第 3 波和 SNAC-K 的 12 年随访)和认知变化(ELSA 的第 3 波和第 9 波之间以及 SNAC-K 的 6 年和 12 年随访之间)进行评估。研究结果研究样本包括来自ELSA的7136名参与者,其中3962人(55-5%)为女性,6934人(97-2%)为白人;平均基线年龄为63-8岁(SD 9-4)。复制分析包括来自 SNAC-K 的 2604 名参与者,其中 1604 人(61-6%)为女性(SNAC-K 没有收集种族数据);平均基线年龄为 72-3 岁(标准差 10-1)。在 ELSA 中,我们发现通过抑郁症状,网络规模、积极支持和较少的消极支持对随后的言语流利性有间接影响,而积极支持对随后的即时回忆有间接影响(纯间接影响 [PIE] 0-002 [95% CI 0-001-0-003])。抑郁症状还部分调节了较少的消极支持与即时回忆(PIE 0-001 [0-000-0-002])和延迟回忆(PIE 0-001 [0-000-0-002])下降速度减慢之间的关系,以及积极支持与即时回忆(PIE 0-001 [0-000-0-001])下降速度减慢之间的关系。我们没有观察到炎症生物标志物的中介作用。抑郁症状对积极支持与言语流畅性之间以及积极支持与即时回忆能力变化之间关系的中介作用在SNAC-K中得到了验证。释义本研究结果为社会健康与认知之间的联系机制提供了新的见解,表明社会健康的互动方面(尤其是社会支持)与认知之间的联系部分是由抑郁症状支撑的。
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Social health and subsequent cognitive functioning in people aged 50 years and older: examining the mediating roles of depressive symptoms and inflammatory biomarkers in two European longitudinal studies

Background

Social health markers, including marital status, contact frequency, network size, and social support, have been shown to be associated with cognition. However, the mechanisms underlying these associations remain poorly understood. We investigated whether depressive symptoms and inflammation mediated associations between social health and subsequent cognition.

Methods

In the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (ELSA), a nationally representative longitudinal study in England, UK, we sampled 7136 individuals aged 50 years or older living in private households without dementia at baseline or at the intermediate mediator assessment timepoint, who had recorded information on at least one social health marker and potential mediator. We used four-way decomposition to examine to what extent depressive symptoms, C-reactive protein, and fibrinogen mediated associations between social health and subsequent standardised cognition (verbal fluency and delayed and immediate recall), including cognitive change, with slopes derived from multilevel models (12-year slope). We examined whether findings were replicated in the Swedish National Study on Aging and Care in Kungsholmen (SNAC-K), a population-based longitudinal study in Sweden, in a sample of 2604 individuals aged 60 years or older living at home or in institutions in Kungsholmen (central Stockholm) without dementia at baseline or at the intermediate mediator assessment timepoint (6-year slope). Social health exposures were assessed at baseline, potential mediators were assessed at an intermediate timepoint (wave 2 in ELSA and 6-year follow-up in SNAC-K); cognitive outcomes were assessed at a single timepoint (wave 3 in ELSA and 12-year follow-up in SNAC-K), and cognitive change (between waves 3 and 9 in ELSA and between 6-year and 12-year follow-ups in SNAC-K).

Findings

The study sample included 7136 participants from ELSA, of whom 3962 (55·5%) were women and 6934 (97·2%) were White; the mean baseline age was 63·8 years (SD 9·4). Replication analyses included 2604 participants from SNAC-K, of whom 1604 (61·6%) were women (SNAC-K did not collect ethnicity data); the mean baseline age was 72·3 years (SD 10·1). In ELSA, we found indirect effects via depressive symptoms of network size, positive support, and less negative support on subsequent verbal fluency, and of positive support on subsequent immediate recall (pure indirect effect [PIE] 0·002 [95% CI 0·001–0·003]). Depressive symptoms also partially mediated associations between less negative support and slower decline in immediate recall (PIE 0·001 [0·000–0·002]) and in delayed recall (PIE 0·001 [0·000–0·002]), and between positive support and slower decline in immediate recall (PIE 0·001 [0·000–0·001]). We did not observe mediation by inflammatory biomarkers. Findings of mediation by depressive symptoms in the association between positive support and verbal fluency and between positive support and change in immediate recall were replicated in SNAC-K.

Interpretation

The findings of this study provide new insights into mechanisms linking social health with cognition, suggesting that associations between interactional aspects of social health, especially social support, and cognition are partly underpinned by depressive symptoms.

Funding

EU Joint Programme—Neurodegenerative Disease Research (JPND) and Alzheimer's Society.

Translation

For the Swedish translation of the abstract see Supplementary Materials section.

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来源期刊
Lancet Healthy Longevity
Lancet Healthy Longevity GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY-
CiteScore
16.30
自引率
2.30%
发文量
192
审稿时长
12 weeks
期刊介绍: The Lancet Healthy Longevity, a gold open-access journal, focuses on clinically-relevant longevity and healthy aging research. It covers early-stage clinical research on aging mechanisms, epidemiological studies, and societal research on changing populations. The journal includes clinical trials across disciplines, particularly in gerontology and age-specific clinical guidelines. In line with the Lancet family tradition, it advocates for the rights of all to healthy lives, emphasizing original research likely to impact clinical practice or thinking. Clinical and policy reviews also contribute to shaping the discourse in this rapidly growing discipline.
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