Leading mediators of sex differences in the incidence of dementia in community-dwelling adults in the UK Biobank: a retrospective cohort study

Author:

Shang Xianwen,Roccati Eddy,Zhu Zhuoting,Kiburg Katerina,Wang Wei,Huang Yu,Zhang Xueli,Zhang Xiayin,Liu Jiahao,Tang Shulin,Hu Yijun,Ge Zongyuan,Yu Honghua,He Mingguang

Abstract

Abstract Background Little is known regarding whether sex assigned at birth modifies the association between several predictive factors for dementia and the risk of dementia itself. Methods Our retrospective cohort study included 214,670 men and 214,670 women matched by age at baseline from the UK Biobank. Baseline data were collected between 2006 and 2010, and incident dementia was ascertained using hospital inpatient or death records until January 2021. Mediation analysis was tested for 133 individual factors. Results Over 5,117,381 person-years of follow-up, 5928 cases of incident all-cause dementia (452 cases of young-onset dementia, 5476 cases of late-onset dementia) were documented. Hazard ratios (95% CI) for all-cause, young-onset, and late-onset dementias associated with the male sex (female as reference) were 1.23 (1.17–1.29), 1.42 (1.18–1.71), and 1.21 (1.15–1.28), respectively. Out of 133 individual factors, the strongest mediators for the association between sex and incident dementia were multimorbidity risk score (percentage explained (95% CI): 62.1% (45.2–76.6%)), apolipoprotein A in the blood (25.5% (15.2–39.4%)), creatinine in urine (24.9% (16.1–36.5%)), low-density lipoprotein cholesterol in the blood (23.2% (16.2–32.1%)), and blood lymphocyte percentage (21.1% (14.5–29.5%)). Health-related conditions (percentage (95% CI) explained: 74.4% (51.3–88.9%)) and biomarkers (83.0% (37.5–97.5%)), but not lifestyle factors combined (30.1% (20.7–41.6%)), fully mediated sex differences in incident dementia. Health-related conditions combined were a stronger mediator for late-onset (75.4% (48.6–90.8%)) than for young-onset dementia (52.3% (25.8–77.6%)), whilst lifestyle factors combined were a stronger mediator for young-onset (42.3% (19.4–69.0%)) than for late-onset dementia (26.7% (17.1–39.2%)). Conclusions Our analysis matched by age has demonstrated that men had a higher risk of all-cause, young-onset, and late-onset dementias than women. This association was fully mediated by health-related conditions or blood/urinary biomarkers and largely mediated by lifestyle factors. Our findings are important for understanding potential mechanisms of sex in dementia risk.

Funder

Postdoctoral Research Funds of Guangdong Provincial People’s Hospital

High-level Talent Flexible Introduction Fund of Guangdong Provincial People’s Hospital

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Cognitive Neuroscience,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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