Sex Matters: Association with Superager Classification and Risk Factors

Author:

McPhee Matthew D12ORCID,McKetton Larissa2,LaPlume Annalise2,Troyer Angela K13,Anderson Nicole D234

Affiliation:

1. Neuropsychology and Cognitive Health, Baycrest Hospital , Toronto, Ontario, Canada

2. Rotman Research Institute, Baycrest Academy for Research and Education , Toronto, Ontario, Canada

3. Department of Psychology, University of Toronto , Toronto, Ontario, Canada

4. Department of Psychiatry, University of Toronto , Toronto, Ontario, Canada

Abstract

Abstract Superagers are 80 to 89-year-olds with average or better cognition and memory equivalent to individuals 20 to 30 years younger. As sex and modifiable lifestyle/health factors influence cognitive aging and dementia risk, we examined their impact on superager status. Data from participants (n = 469; 67% female) aged 80–89 years old were analyzed from an online database that included demographic and dementia risk factors, and performance on tasks assessing working memory, cognitive inhibition, associative memory, and set shifting. Cross-sectional comparisons were made between superagers and those with typical-for-age cognitive abilities (typical-agers) to examine relationships between sex, superager status, and dementia risk factors. Females performed better than age-matched males on the associative memory task in the 50–69 years old group used for normative comparisons, and in the 80–89 years old group (ps < .001). More females than males were classified as superagers using non-sex-stratified normative comparisons (p = .009), and in sex-stratified normative comparisons (p = .022). Total weighted dementia risk reduced odds of superager status (OR = 0.199, 95% CI [0.046, 0.829]). Other lifestyle dementia risk factors were unrelated to superager status or could not be tested due to low endorsement. The findings support observations that superaging is more common in females, even when controlling for sex differences in memory performance. Future studies of superagers should account for sex differences. Results support being ambitious about dementia prevention, as having fewer modifiable dementia risk factors may be positively associated with superager status.

Funder

Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

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