Sex-Specific Protective Effects of Cognitive Reserve on Age-Related Cognitive Decline

Author:

Alty Jane E.ORCID,Bindoff Aidan D.ORCID,Stuart Kimberley E.,Roccati Eddy,Collins Jessica M.,King Anna E.,Summers Mathew J.,Vickers James C.

Abstract

Background and ObjectivesFemales have a higher age-adjusted incidence of Alzheimer disease than males but the reasons for this remain unclear. One proposed contributing factor is that, historically, females had less access to education and, therefore, may accumulate less cognitive reserve. However, educational attainment is confounded by IQ, which in itself is a component of cognitive reserve and does not differ between sexes. Steeper age-related cognitive declines are associated with increased risk of dementia. We, therefore, evaluated the moderating effects of 2 proxies for cognitive reserve, education and IQ, on the steepness of age-related declining cognitive trajectories in unimpaired older males and females.MethodsThe Tasmanian Healthy Brain Project, a long-term cohort study, recruited healthy Australians aged 50–80 years without cognitive impairment. Baseline cognitive reserve was measured using educational history and IQ, measured by the Wechsler Test of Adult Reading, Full Scale Predicted IQ (WTAR-FSIQ). Cognitive trajectories for language, executive function, and episodic and working memory over 5 years were extracted from neuropsychological assessments. The adjusted effects of education, estimated IQ, andAPOEallelic variant on cognitive trajectories were compared between males and females.ResultsFive hundred sixty-two individuals (mean [SD] age 60 [6.7] years; 68% male; 33%APOEε4+) were followed up over 5 years with 1,924 assessments and 24,946 cognitive test scores (annualized attrition rate 6.6% per year). Estimated IQ correlated with years of education (p< 0.001). Estimated IQ interacted with sex to moderate age-related cognitive trajectories (p= 0.03; adjusted for education); lower IQ males experienced steeper declining trajectories than higher IQ males, but lower IQ females had similar steepness of declining trajectories to higher IQ females. Education was not associated with rate of cognitive decline (p= 0.67; adjusted for WTAR-FSIQ). There were no significant differences in age-related cognitive trajectories betweenAPOEgenotypes in either sex.DiscussionIQ, a measure of cognitive reserve, predicted the steepness of declining cognitive trajectories in males only. Education did not explain as much variation in cognitive trajectories as IQ. Our findings do not support the hypothesis that historical sex disparities in access to education contribute to the higher female incidence of Alzheimer disease.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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