Characterization of African‐American Super‐Agers in the National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center cohort

Author:

Trammell Antoine R.1ORCID,Goldstein Felicia C.2,Parker Monica W.2,Hajjar Ihab M.3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Medicine Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta Georgia USA

2. Department of Neurology Emory University School of Medicine Atlanta Georgia USA

3. Department of Medicine and Neurology University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center Dallas Texas USA

Abstract

AbstractBackground“Super‐agers” are adults aged ≥80 with cognitive performance similar to persons two to three decades younger. Characteristics such as larger hippocampal volume, APOE‐ε4 allele absence, higher educational attainment, female sex, and lifelong cognitive stimulation are associated with cognitive performance compatible with super‐aging. These findings are based on predominantly white research samples. Limited data are available on African‐American super‐agers. To fill this gap, we explored potential factors associated with super‐aging in older African‐American adults.MethodsData from African‐American participants aged ≥80 in the National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center (NACC) dataset were analyzed. Using global Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) scores, participants were first categorized as impaired (score ≥0.5) or non‐impaired/normal cognition (NC) (score = 0). From the NC group, super‐agers were identified using NACC‐data‐driven cutoffs. Participants were considered super‐agers if their memory performance was similar to persons aged 50–60 with NC, and their performance on other domains was within one standard deviation of the mean for persons aged ≥80. We examined group characteristics (NC, super‐ager, impaired) using chi‐square and ANOVA with pairwise comparisons. Multinomial logistic regression, adjusted for sex and education, evaluated correlates of super‐ager group assignment.ResultsData for 1285 African‐American participants aged ≥80 were analyzed. We identified 24.7% (n = 316) NC, 4.8% (n = 61) super‐agers, and 70.6% (n = 905) impaired. Super‐agers were mostly female and more educated, had similar vascular comorbidities as the other groups, and had less sleep disorders, depression, and alcohol use. After adjusting for sex and education, super‐ager group assignment was associated with less sleep disorders, less depression, and moderate alcohol use.ConclusionsParticipants with controlled vascular risk, mental health, alcohol use, and sleep disorders tended to be in the super‐ager group. These factors may be important focus areas in clinical practice to support cognitive resilience with aging in older African‐American adults.

Funder

School of Medicine, Emory University

National Institutes of Health

Alzheimer's Association

Publisher

Wiley

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