Abstract

Hearing loss and cognitive impairments are both highly prevalent neurological complications for older adults. While there is growing evidence to suggest that these two conditions are interrelated, little research has been conducted that directly examines the progression and developmental trajectories of these complications contemporaneously. The aim of the study is to identify the distinct trajectory profiles for hearing loss and cognitive function in an older population over a 10-year period. Through dual trajectory modeling, the interrelationship, co-occurring movements, and overlaps between these two complications were examined. We also investigated the influence of hearing aid ownership on cognitive function trajectories. We utilized longitudinal data from 1,445 participants in the Blue Mountains Hearing Study (aged 55+ years) involving repeated measures from a population-based survey with audiometric hearing assessments. Cognitive function was assessed using the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE). The group-based trajectory modeling (GBTM) identified three trajectory profiles for both hearing loss and cognitive function in two older age groups (55–69 years and 70+ years). The outputs from the dual trajectories models showed the conditional probability for “no hearing loss” trajectories to be around 90% more likely to have “high-normal” cognitive function, demonstrating co-occurring overlap. In contrast, for “moderate to severe hearing loss” trajectories, the conditional probability drops to 65% and 79% for the 55–69 age group and 70+ age group respectively. There was also an increasing probability for “cognitive decline” conditional on the severity of hearing loss with 6.7%, 7.5%, and 8.7% for no hearing loss, mild hearing loss, and moderate to severe hearing loss trajectory groups. While we did not find any statistically significant difference in the influence of hearing aid use in the cognitive function trajectories, there was a consistent greater representation of non-hearing aid users in the trajectories with poorer cognitive function. This study found GBTM to identify trajectories that were in agreement with our current understanding of hearing loss and cognitive impairment in older adults. This study also adds to the existing evidence-base as dual trajectories demonstrated co-occurrence in developmental changes in these two common neurological complications for the older population.

Highlights

  • Growth in the older population is increasing worldwide mostly due to the rise in life expectancy

  • To guide the choice for the optimal number of trajectories we evaluated the fit for each number of classes, using the fit indices from information criterion indices Akaike information criterion (AIC) and Bayesian information criterion (BIC), a measure of entropy, Lo-Mendell-Rubin (LMR) test and the parametric bootstrap likelihood-ratio test (BLRT) and interpretability of the model (Nylund et al, 2007)

  • This study examined the developmental pathways of two interrelated complications prevalent in the older population—hearing loss and cognitive impairment

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Summary

Introduction

Growth in the older population is increasing worldwide mostly due to the rise in life expectancy. It has been estimated that by 2050 the number of persons aged 65 years or over will double to 1.5 billion (United Nations, Department of Economics and Social Affairs, Population Division, 2019) With this rapid demographic aging, the prevalence of disease and disability will likely surge. The projected rise for dementia, a syndrome that leads to deterioration of cognitive function, is estimated to reach 139 million in 2050, which is, 2.5 times greater than the current prevalence (World Health Organization, 2017) Aside from both being highly prevalent, there is growing evidence to suggest that these two conditions are interrelated, possibly leading to a compounding burden (Nadhimi and Llano, 2021). One postulation for their linkage is that hearing loss has associations with language comprehension and that cognitive decline will increase the contributing effect of hearing loss as a cognitive impairing factor (Peracino and Pecorelli, 2016)

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