Abstract
ObjectiveWe aimed to identify the effect of lifespan cognitive reserve and (pre)frailty on mild cognitive impairment (MCI) among older adults. Materials and methodsA total of 4420 older adults aged above 60 with intact cognition recruited in 2011/2012 were followed up in 2015 from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS). The assessment of MCI was based on executive function, episodic memory, and visual-spatial ability. (Pre)frailty was assessed by the validated version of the Fried physical frailty phenotype scale. The lifespan cognitive reserve consisted of the highest educational level, occupational complexity, and participation in leisure activities. Modified Poisson regression models were used to identify the risk of MCI in relation to (pre)frailty and lifespan cognitive reserve index. We examined the interactions of (pre)frailty and lifespan cognitive reserve index on both additive and multiplicative scales. ResultsBaseline (pre)frailty significantly increased the risk of MCI after 3–4 years of follow-up, and high cognitive reserve protected individuals from the risk of MCI. There was an additive interaction between (pre)frailty and the low lifespan cognitive reserve (the relative excess interaction risk=1.08, 95 % CI= 0.25–1,91), but no multiplicative interaction (RR=0.95, 95 % CI= 0.67–1.37). The risk of MCI was larger among older adults with comorbid (pre)frailty and low cognitive reserve than those with each condition alone. ConclusionCognitive reserve attenuates the risk of MCI associated with (pre)frailty. This finding implicates the urgency for identifying and managing MCI among frail older adults who accumulate low cognitive reserve in the life course.
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