Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAfrican Americans (AA) represent 12% of the United States population ≥65 years‐old, but 19% of persons with dementia. Inequalities in social determinants of health may influence access to healthcare resources contributing to increased dementia risk. Modifiable risk factors, including vascular risk factors and depression, may contribute up to 40% of dementia risk and are overrepresented in AA. Accordingly, risk factor modification in AA may improve disparities and decrease dementia risk.MethodDementia risk factors were evaluated in community‐dwelling AA (n = 261) and non‐Hispanic White (NHW; n = 193) participants who completed ≥2 research visits in studies of memory and aging at the Mayo Clinic Florida Alzheimer Disease Research Center. The association between modifiable risk factors and cognitive impairment (global Clinical Dementia Rating® [CDR] ≥0.5), and rates of decline in impaired participants (measured using the CDR Sum‐of‐Boxes; CDR‐sb) were compared between AA and NHW, while controlling for demographics, APOEe4 status, and Area Deprivation Index.ResultModifiable dementia risk factors were common in AA and NHW participants. The ADI was higher in AA denoting greater socioeconomic and environmental deprivation [7.8 (2.3) vs. 4.0 (2.1); p<0.001]. History of stroke/transient ischemic attack (OR, CI95% = 2.52, 1.08‐5.83) was associated with an increased odds of dementia in AA participants only, while depression was associated with an increased odds of dementia in both AA (3.10, 1.52‐6.30) and NHW (3.46, 1.14‐10.48) participants. Moreover, depression (β, CI95% = 1.55, 0.5‐2.6), p = 0.004) was associated with a faster rate of decline (CDR‐sb) in cognitively impaired AA participants. AA participants with depression were disproportionately less likely to report use of antidepressant medications than NHW counterparts (40/45, 89% vs. 21/44, 48%); p<0.001).ConclusionModifiable risk factors associated with dementia were common in AA and NHW participants. Depression was associated with dementia in both AA and NHW but uniquely associated with an accelerated rate of cognitive decline in AA participants. Disparities in use of antidepressant medications may contribute to these differences. Optimizing depression treatment in AA communities may improve cognitive trajectories and dementia risk in this population.

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