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Circulating Omega-3 and Omega-6 Fatty Acids, Cognitive Decline, and Dementia in Older Adults

Marcia C. de Oliveira Otto, Jason Wu, Evan L. Thacker, Heidi Lai, Rozenn N. Lemaître, Nikhil Padhye, Xiaoling Song, Irena B. King, Oscar L. López, David S. Siscovick, Dariush Mozaffarian

2023Journal of Alzheimer s Disease24 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Comprising nearly 35% of brain lipids, polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFA) are essential for optimal brain function. However, the role of PUFA on cognitive health outcomes later in life is largely unknown. OBJECTIVE: We investigated prospective associations of plasma phospholipid omega-3 (ALA [18 : 3], EPA [20 : 5], DPA [22 : 5], DHA [22 : 6]) and omega-6 (LA [18 : 2], AA [20 : 4]) PUFA with cognitive decline, risk of cognitive impairment and dementia among adults aged≥65 years in the Cardiovascular Health Study. METHODS: Circulating fatty acid concentrations were measured serially at baseline (1992/1993), 6 years, and 13 years later. Cognitive decline and impairment were assessed using the 100-point Modified Mini-Mental State Examination (3MSE) up to 7 times. Clinical dementia was identified using adjudicated neuropsychological tests, and ICD-9 codes. RESULTS: Among 3,564 older adults free of stroke and dementia at baseline, cognitive function declined annually by approximately -0.5 3MSE points; 507 participants developed cognitive impairment and 499 dementia over up to 23 years of follow-up. In multivariable models, higher circulating arachidonic acid (AA) concentrations were associated with slower cognitive decline and lower dementia risk, with associations growing stronger with greater length of follow-up (hazard ratio [HR,95% CI] of dementia per interquintile range, 0.74 [0.56-0.97] at 5 years, and 0.53 [0.37-0.77] at 15 years). Circulating docosapentaenoic (DPA) concentrations were associated with slower cognitive decline and lower risk of cognitive impairment (extreme-quintile HR, 0.72 [95% CI: 0.55, 0.95]). Findings were generally null or inconsistent for other omega-3 or omega-6 PUFA. CONCLUSION: Circulating AA and DPA, but not other PUFA, are associated with slower rate of cognitive decline and lower risk of dementia or cognitive impairment later in life.

Topics & Concepts

DementiaDocosapentaenoic acidCognitive declineHazard ratioPolyunsaturated fatty acidInternal medicineMedicineCognitionArachidonic acidProspective cohort studyNeuropsychologyOmega 3 fatty acidGerontologyPsychiatryFatty acidDocosahexaenoic acidConfidence intervalBiologyDiseaseBiochemistryEnzymeFatty Acid Research and HealthNutritional Studies and DietDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research