Association of anticholinergic drug exposure with the risk of dementia among older adults in Japan: The LIFE Study

Author:

Okita Yuki1,Kitamura Tetsuhisa1ORCID,Komukai Sho2,Zha Ling1,Komatsu Masayo1,Narii Nobuhiro1,Murata Fumiko3ORCID,Megumi Maeda3,Gon Yasufumi4,Kimura Yasuyoshi4,Kiyohara Kosuke5,Sobue Tomotaka1,Fukuda Haruhisa3

Affiliation:

1. Division of Environmental Medicine and Population Sciences Department of Social Medicine Graduate School of Medicine Osaka University Suita Japan

2. Biomedical Statistics Department of Integrated Medicine Graduate School of Medicine Osaka University Suita Japan

3. Department of Health Care Administration and Management Kyushu University Graduate School of Medical Sciences Fukuoka Japan

4. Department of Neurology Graduate School of Medicine Osaka University Suita Japan

5. Department of Food Science Faculty of Home Economics Otsuma Women's University Chiyoda‐ku Japan

Abstract

AbstractObjectivesSeveral studies have investigated that anticholinergic drugs cause cognitive impairment. However, the risk of dementia associated with anticholinergics has not been extensively investigated in the super‐aging society of Japan. We conducted this study to assess the association between anticholinergic drugs and the risk of dementia in older adults in Japan.MethodsThis nested case‐control study used data from the Longevity Improvement & Fair Evidence Study, which includes claim data in Japan from 2014 to 2020. We included 66,478 cases of diagnosed dementia and 328,919 matched controls aged ≥65 years, matched by age, sex, municipality, and cohort entry year. Primary exposure was the total cumulative anticholinergic drugs prescribed from cohort entry date to event date or matched index date, which was the total standardized daily doses for each patient, calculated by adding the total dose of different types of anticholinergic drugs in each prescription, divided by the World Health Organization‐defined daily dose values. Odds ratios for dementia associated with cumulative exposure to anticholinergic drugs were calculated using conditional logistic regression adjusted for confounding variables.ResultsThe mean (standard deviation) age at index date was 84.3 (6.9), and the percentage of women was 62.1%. From cohort entry date to event date or matched index date, 18.8% of the case patients and 13.7% of the controls were prescribed at least one anticholinergic drug. In the multivariable‐adjusted model, individuals with anticholinergic drugs prescribed had significantly higher odds of being diagnosed with dementia (adjusted odds ratio, 1.50 [95% confidence interval, 1.47–1.54]). Among specific types of anticholinergic drugs, a significant increase in risk was observed with the use of antidepressants, antiparkinsonian drugs, antipsychotics, and bladder antimuscarinics in a fully multivariable‐adjusted model.ConclusionsSeveral types of anticholinergic drugs used by older adults in Japan are associated with an increased risk of dementia. These findings suggest that the underlying risks should be considered alongside the benefits of prescribing anticholinergic drugs to this population.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Geriatrics and Gerontology

Reference44 articles.

1. AsadaT.Prevalence of Dementia and Response to Life Dysfunction Due to Dementia in Urban Areas. Health Labour Sciences Research Grants Dementia Countermeasures Comprehensive Research Project 2011‐2012 Research Report;2013.

2. NinomiyaT.Study on Future Projection of the Elderly Population with Dementia in Japan Health and Labor Sciences Research Grants Special Health and Labor Sciences Research Project 2014 Research Report;2015.

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