Vietnamese Insights into Cognitive Aging Program (VIP): Objectives, study design, and cohort description

Author:

Meyer Oanh L.1ORCID,Farias Sarah Tomaszewski1,Whitmer Rachel A.1,Kanaya Alka M.2,Harvey Danielle1,Hinton Ladson1,Tiet Quyen Q.34,Vuong Quyen5,Gavett Brandon1,Park Van Ta6

Affiliation:

1. School of Medicine University of California, Davis Sacramento California USA

2. Division of General Internal Medicine University of California San Francisco California USA

3. Clinical Psychology Program California School of Professional Psychology at Alliant International University Emeryville California USA

4. National Center for PTSD Dissemination and Training Division VA Palo Alto Health Care System Menlo Park California USA

5. International Children Assistance Network (ICAN) San Jose California USA

6. School of Nursing University of California San Francisco California USA

Abstract

AbstractIntroductionThere is a dearth of research on cognitive aging and dementia in Asian Americans, particularly in Vietnamese Americans, the fourth largest Asian subgroup in the United States.MethodsThe Vietnamese Insights into Cognitive Aging Program (VIP) investigates early life adversity and war‐related trauma and their associations with cognitive health in a community‐based sample of older Vietnamese Americans in Northern California (i.e., Sacramento and Santa Clara counties). Baseline measurements include a comprehensive neuropsychological battery, including measures of global cognition along with executive function, semantic memory, and episodic memory. Data also include measures of functioning, early life adversity and trauma exposure, and psychosocial and traditional cardiovascular disease risk factors. Cognitive assessments will be repeated twice over the course of the data collection period, approximately 12‐ and 24‐ months post‐baseline. Blood samples collected during Wave 2 will be assayed for biochemical risk factors.ResultsBaseline assessments were conducted from January 2022 to November 2023, with N = 548 Vietnamese Americans; mean age ± SD was 73 ± 5.31 years and 55% of participants were women. There were significant differences in social factors by site, with Santa Clara participants having higher education (some college or higher: Sacramento, ≈25%; Santa Clara: ≈48%) and marginally higher incomes compared to Sacramento participants. A higher percentage of Santa Clara participants reported speaking English well or very well (24%) compared to Sacramento participants (13%), although the majority of the entire sample (81%) reported speaking some to no English (response options: not at all; some/a little bit; well/very well).DiscussionThis longitudinal study providea a unique opportunity to more fully delineate psychosocial factors that contribute to dementia disparities in diverse and under‐engaged populations. Future work will examine cognition, the prevalence of mild cognitive impairment and dementia, and other health outcomes, while controlling for site differences in all analyses.Highlights Vietnamese Insights into Cognitive Aging Program (VIP) is a new study. VIP has detailed early life and health data on 548 older Vietnamese Americans. History of war and trauma may contribute to Alzheimer's disease and related dementias (ADRD)–related burden. VIP may provide insight into ADRD burden in other understudied groups.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

Alzheimer's Association

Publisher

Wiley

Reference41 articles.

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3. Incidence Rates of Dementia, Alzheimer Disease, and Vascular Dementia in the Japanese American Population in Seattle, WA

4. Inequalities in dementia incidence between six racial and ethnic groups over 14 years

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