Litcius/Paper detail

Mid- to Late-Life Body Mass Index and Dementia Risk: 38 Years of Follow-up of the Framingham Study

Jinlei Li, Prajakta Joshi, Ting Fang Alvin Ang, Chunyu Liu, Sanford Auerbach, Sherral Devine, Rhoda Au

2021American Journal of Epidemiology82 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Growing evidence relates body mass index (BMI) to poorer health outcomes; however, results across studies associating BMI and dementia are conflicting. A total of 3,632 Framingham Offspring participants aged 20 to 60 years at their second health examination (1979-1983) were included in this study, with 190 cases of incident dementia identified by 2017. Cox proportional hazards regression models were fitted to investigate the association of BMI at each of their 8 exams as a baseline for dementia risk and the associations between obesity and dementia across age groups. Spline models were fitted to investigate nonlinear associations between BMI and dementia. Each 1-unit increase in BMI at ages 40-49 years was associated with higher risk of dementia, but with lower risk after age 70 years. Obesity at ages 40-49 years was associated with higher risk of dementia. Overall, the relationship between BMI and dementia risk was heterogeneous across the adult age range. Monitoring BMI at different ages might mediate risk for dementia across an individual's lifetime.

Topics & Concepts

DementiaMedicineBody mass indexFramingham Heart StudyProportional hazards modelObesityDemographyGerontologyFramingham Risk ScoreDiseaseInternal medicineSociologyDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchNutrition and Health in AgingNutritional Studies and Diet