Anticholinergic burden in middle and older age is associated with lower cognitive function, but not with brain atrophy

Author:

Mur Jure123ORCID,Marioni Riccardo E.2,Russ Tom C.345,Muniz‐Terrera Graciela46,Cox Simon R.1

Affiliation:

1. Lothian Birth Cohorts Group, Department of Psychology University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

2. Centre for Genomic and Experimental Medicine, Institute of Genetics and Molecular Medicine University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

3. Alzheimer Scotland Dementia Research Centre University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

4. Edinburgh Dementia Prevention University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

5. Division of Psychiatry, Centre for Clinical Brain Science University of Edinburgh Edinburgh UK

6. Department of Social Medicine Ohio University Athens Ohio USA

Abstract

AimsThe aim of this study is to estimate the association between anticholinergic burden, general cognitive ability and various measures of brain structural MRI in relatively healthy middle‐aged and older individuals.MethodsIn the UK Biobank participants with linked health‐care records (n = 163,043, aged 40–71 at baseline), of whom about 17 000 had MRI data available, we calculated the total anticholinergic drug burden according to 15 different anticholinergic scales and due to different classes of drugs. We then used linear regression to explore the associations between anticholinergic burden and various measures of cognition and structural MRI, including general cognitive ability, 9 separate cognitive domains, brain atrophy, volumes of 68 cortical and 14 subcortical areas and fractional anisotropy and median diffusivity of 25 white‐matter tracts.ResultsAnticholinergic burden was modestly associated with poorer cognition across most anticholinergic scales and cognitive tests (7/9 FDR‐adjusted significant associations, standardised betas (β) range: −0.039, −0.003). When using the anticholinergic scale exhibiting the strongest association with cognitive functions, anticholinergic burden due to only some classes of drugs exhibited negative associations with cognitive function, with β‐lactam antibiotics (β = −0.035, PFDR < 0.001) and opioids (β = −0.026, PFDR < 0.001) exhibiting the strongest effects. Anticholinergic burden was not associated with any measure of brain macrostructure or microstructure (PFDR > 0.08).ConclusionsAnticholinergic burden is weakly associated with poorer cognition, but there is little evidence for associations with brain structure. Future studies might focus more broadly on polypharmacy or more narrowly on distinct drug classes, instead of using purported anticholinergic action to study the effects of drugs on cognitive ability.

Funder

Chief Scientist Office

Economic and Social Research Council

Wellcome Trust

Alzheimer's Society

Royal Society of Edinburgh

Scottish Government

NHS Blood and Transplant

UK Research and Innovation

Royal Society

Age UK

Medical Research Council

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Pharmacology (medical),Pharmacology

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