Abstract

AbstractBackgroundMid‐life obesity is linked with increased risk for late‐life dementia, however relationships between later‐life body composition and dementia are less clear.MethodUsing a combined cohort from two major observational studies (AIBL and ADNI) and categorising Body Mass Index (BMI) according to WHO criteria, we computed multivariable linear mixed‐effects models to determine association between BMI category and outcomes: brain beta‐amyloid PET quantification (centiloid); MRI (global, hippocampal and white matter hyperintensity volume); and cognition (PACC [preclinical Alzheimer cognitive composite], composite scores for attention, executive function and episodic memory). All models were adjusted by covariables age, gender, education, APOE ε4, and study (AIBL/ADNI).ResultsThe cohort included 4,668 observations from 2,828 individuals (49.4% male, mean age 73.8 years, 38.2% APOE ε4 carriage, 61.8% normal cognition [NC], 25.6% Mild Cognitive Impairment [MCI], 12.6% dementia due to Alzheimer’s disease). The average BMI was 26.8 kg/m2 (0.6% underweight, 37.7% normal‐range, 41.7% overweight, 20.0% obese [BMI <18, 18‐25, 25‐30 and >30 kg/m2, respectively]).Relative to normal‐range BMI, those with overweight‐or‐obese range BMI had a significant negative association with PET centiloid level, beta = ‐0.150 (0.037 se) and ‐0.309 (0.042), respectively (i.e. greater BMI had lower amyloid level). This remained significant for obese‐range BMI in fully‐adjusted models when restricted to only NC participants. Also, obesity was associated with greater hippocampal volume, beta = 0.192 (0.046), but this was not significant when restricted to NC only. Associations with total grey matter/cortical volume and white matter hyperintensities were not significant. Obese‐range BMI was associated with stronger performance on attention and episodic memory composites, but not for PACC and executive function. For NC‐only, there was only significant negative association between obesity and attention performance. In multivariate analyses, neither obesity category nor BMI were associated with longitudinal change in cognitive scores.ConclusionPresence of obesity in later life was associated with lower brain amyloid levels and less hippocampal atrophy in a mixed cohort including older adults with dementia, mild cognitive impairment and normal cognition. While mid‐life obesity is associated greater risk for AD, later life associations appear influenced by weight loss with emerging dementia.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.