Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThe retina and the brain microvasculatures share many anatomical and physiological similarities; thus, retinal microvasculature could represent a potential screening tool for cerebrovascular and neurodegenerative diseases. Changes in retinal microvasculature have been associated with dementia in previous studies. However, all the previous studies analyzing retinal vascular network features in relation to dementia or Alzheimer Disease (AD) were cross‐sectional. This study aimed to explore the longitudinal relationship between retinal microvascular features and dementia incidence over a 10‐year follow‐up period.MethodWe included 617 participants from the Three‐City (3C) population‐based cohort and its ancillary ophthalmological study, the Alienor study. Quantitative retinal vascular features (caliber, tortuosity, fractal dimension) were assessed at baseline in the Alienor study using the semi‐automated Singapore I Vessel Assessment (SIVA) software; dementia was actively screened and diagnosed over a 10‐year period. Cox proportional‐hazards models were used to estimate the risk of incident dementia and its main etiologies (i.e., probable or possible AD and mixed or vascular dementia) associated with retinal vascular features.ResultThe mean age of the participants was 79.5 years (SD 4.4) and 66.6% were women. During the follow‐up (median of 7.2 years), 134 participants developed dementia (87 probable or possible AD and 38 mixed or vascular dementia). In multivariate models adjusted for the main potential confounders (socio‐demographic factors, vascular co‐morbidities and Apolipoprotein ε4 allele), increased arteriolar tortuosity was associated with increased risk of dementia (HR per SD increase = 1.26, 95%CI: 1.07; 1.50). Despite some trends, retinal calibers were not significantly associated with dementia all‐cause. When considering the different etiologies of dementia, wider retinal venular calibers were associated with mixed or vascular dementia, but not with Alzheimer’s disease. Fractal dimensions were not associated with dementia.ConclusionChanges in retinal microvasculature were associated with risk of incident dementia. More works are needed to replicate and determine which features could help identifying persons at risk of future dementia at an early stage, and to examine the specific processes that might be involved according to dementia etiology.

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