Abstract

AbstractBackgroundDietary factors influence cognitive functions, but most previous studies were conducted in Western settings and assessed diet only once. Trajectory analysis of diet measured at multiple timepoints can track changes in diet and identify subpopulations requiring more intervention efforts. We thus assessed associations between dietary trajectories and cognitive functions in an understudied Asian elderly population.MethodThe TIGER study involves non‐demented community‐dwelling participants aged ≥65 years recruited between 2011‐2013. Dietary intakes were assessed using a food frequency questionnaire during baseline and 4th‐ and 6th‐year follow‐ups. Modified Alternative Healthy Eating Index (mAHEI) scores (energy‐adjusted using the residual method) were generated at each timepoint to reflect diet quality. Longitudinal trajectories of dietary quality were derived using latent growth mixture modelling. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment—Taiwanese version was used to assess global cognition for outcomes. Cognitive functions (baseline‐normalized z‐scores) of four cognitive domains, i.e., memory, attention, executive function, and verbal fluency, were also assessed. Associations between trajectories of dietary quality and cognitive functions were assessed using linear regressions, adjusting for important covariates including sex, apolipoprotein (APOE) e4 status, baseline age, body mass index (BMI), and depressive symptoms.ResultIncluded participants (n = 356) were 54.2% female, had a mean age of 71.6 years, and a mean BMI of 23.8 kg/m2 at baseline. The overall mean mAHEI scores were close to 37 (out of 70 possible) at all three time points. Three trajectories of dietary quality, namely 1) ‘increasing’, 2) ‘decreasing’, and 3) ‘stable‐high’ were identified and deemed optimal considering fit indices and interpretability. Compared with ‘stable‐high’ dietary quality trajectory, the ‘increasing’ trajectory was associated with worse memory performance (adjusted‐β = ‐0.424; 95% CI: ‐0.679, ‐0.169; P = 0.001) whereas the ‘decreasing’ trajectory was associated with worse performance for the verbal fluency domain (adjusted‐β = ‐0.342; 95% CI: ‐0.653, ‐0.030; P = 0.031). No other significant associations were observed.ConclusionMaintaining a stable‐high dietary quality trajectory over time is associated with better cognitive functions among Taiwanese older adults. Since there is much room for dietary improvement in this Taiwanese population, interventions to promote and sustain better dietary quality over time can have substantial impacts on their cognitive functions.

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