• Age and ageing · Nov 2015

    Observational Study

    Cognition and mortality in older people: the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study.

    • Michael H Connors, Perminder S Sachdev, Nicole A Kochan, Jing Xu, Brian Draper, and Henry Brodaty.
    • Dementia Collaborative Research Centre-Assessment and Better Care, UNSW Australia Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing (CHeBA), School of Psychiatry, University of New South Wales.
    • Age Ageing. 2015 Nov 1; 44 (6): 1049-54.

    BackgroundBoth cognitive ability and cognitive decline have been shown to predict mortality in older people. As dementia, a major form of cognitive decline, has an established association with shorter survival, it is unclear the extent to which cognitive ability and cognitive decline predict mortality in the absence of dementia.ObjectiveTo determine whether cognitive ability and decline in cognitive ability predict mortality in older individuals without dementia.DesignThe Sydney Memory and Ageing Study is an observational population-based cohort study. Participants completed detailed neuropsychological assessments and medical examinations to assess for risk factors such as depression, obesity, hypertension, diabetes, hypercholesterolaemia, smoking and physical activity. Participants were regularly assessed at 2-year intervals over 8 years.SettingA community sample in Sydney, Australia.SubjectsOne thousand and thirty-seven elderly people without dementia.ResultsOverall, 236 (22.8%) participants died within 8 years. Both cognitive ability at baseline and decline in cognitive ability over 2 years predicted mortality. Decline in cognitive ability, but not baseline cognitive ability, was a significant predictor of mortality when depression and other medical risk factors were controlled for. These relationships also held when excluding incident cases of dementia.ConclusionsThe findings indicate that decline in cognition is a robust predictor of mortality in older people without dementia at a population level. This relationship is not accounted for by co-morbid depression or other established biomedical risk factors.© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the British Geriatrics Society. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

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