Educational Attainment and Dementia: Mediation by Mid‐Life Vascular Risk Factors

Author:

Liu Chelsea1ORCID,Ma Yuan1ORCID,Hofman Albert1,Waziry Reem2,Koton Silvia34,Pike James R.5,Windham B. Gwen6,Power Melinda C.7,Sharrett A. Richey4,Gottesman Rebecca F.8ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Epidemiology Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health Boston MA USA

2. Department of Neurology, Columbia University Irving Medical Center Columbia University New York NY USA

3. Stanley Steyer School of Health Professions, Sackler Faculty of Medicine Tel Aviv University Tel Aviv Israel

4. Department of Epidemiology Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health Baltimore MD USA

5. Gillings School of Global Public Health University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill Chapel Hill NC USA

6. Department of Medicine University of Mississippi Medical Center Jackson MS USA

7. Department of Epidemiology George Washington University Milken Institute School of Public Health Washington DC USA

8. National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke Intramural Research Program Bethesda MD USA

Abstract

IntroductionLower education is associated with higher burden of vascular risk factors in mid‐life and higher risk of dementia in late life. We aim to understand the causal mechanism through which vascular risk factors potentially mediate the relationship between education and dementia.MethodsIn a cohort of 13,368 Black and White older adults in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Study, we assessed the relationship between education (grade school, high school without graduation, high school graduate or equivalent, college, graduate/professional school) and dementia among all participants and among those with incident stroke. Cox models were adjusted for age, race‐center (a variable stratified by race and field center), sex, apolipoprotein E (APOE) ε4 genotype, and family history of cardiovascular disease. Causal mediation models assessed mediation by mid‐life systolic blood pressure, fasting blood glucose, body mass index, and smoking.ResultsMore education was associated with 8 to 44% lower risk of dementia compared to grade school‐level education in a dose–response pattern, while the relationship between education and post‐stroke dementia was not statistically significant. Up to 25% of the association between education and dementia was mediated through mid‐life vascular risk factors, with a smaller percentage mediated for lower levels of education.InterpretationA substantial proportion of the relationship between education and dementia was mediated through mid‐life vascular risk factors. However, risk factor modification is unlikely to fully address the large educational disparities in dementia risk. Prevention efforts must also address disparities in socioeconomic resources leading to divergent early‐life education and other structural determinants of mid‐life vascular risk factors. ANN NEUROL 2023;94:13–26

Funder

National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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