Abstract

To compare the use of lipid-lowering drugs in community-dwelling older adults with and without dementia. Comparison of lipid-lowering drug use by demented cases and nondemented controls based on secondary analysis of data from a longitudinal epidemiologic study. Longitudinal study of a largely rural, low- socioeconomic-status, community-based cohort of older persons residing in the mid-Monongahela Valley of South-west Pennsylvania (the Monongahela Valley Independent Elders Survey). Eight hundred forty-five individuals of mean +/- standard deviation (SD) age of 80.5 +/- 4.6, participating in the fifth biennial wave of data collection. Demographics; medical history; medication regimen (including examination of prescription bottle labels); self-report of most recent visit to primary care physician (PCP); and standardized clinical assessment to determine presence of dementia, including Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR). One hundred seventy participants (20.1% of total subject cohort) had dementia, with a CDR of 0.5 or greater. Mean ages of demented and nondemented individuals were 83.5 +/- 5.1 and 79.8 +/- 4.2, respectively. Similar proportions, 87.7% and 89.5%, of these groups reported PCP visits in the previous year. Of the total sample, 9.4% (3.5% of the demented and 10.8% of the nondemented) were taking lipid-lowering drugs. After adjustment for age, sex, education, visit with PCP within the past year, and potential confounding clinical and lifestyle variables (self-reported heart disease, stroke or transient ischemic attacks, hypertension, smoking, and alcohol consumption), dementia was associated with a lower likelihood of taking a lipid-lowering drug (odds ratio = 0.39, 95% confidence interval = 0.16-0.95). In post hoc subgroup analyses, similar results were found when restricting lipid-lowering drugs to statins alone but were not statistically significant. Drug use was not associated with severity of dementia (CDR = 0.5 vs CDR >or= 1). Demented individuals were less likely than their nondemented counterparts to be taking lipid-lowering drugs. This finding could reflect different prescribing patterns by physicians for demented and nondemented patients or a possible protective effect of these drugs against dementia.

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