Alzheimer’s Research & Therapy (May 2022)

Explaining the association between social and lifestyle factors and cognitive functions: a pathway analysis in the Memento cohort

  • Leslie Grasset,
  • Cécile Proust-Lima,
  • Jean-François Mangin,
  • Marie-Odile Habert,
  • Bruno Dubois,
  • Claire Paquet,
  • Olivier Hanon,
  • Audrey Gabelle,
  • Mathieu Ceccaldi,
  • Cédric Annweiler,
  • Renaud David,
  • Therese Jonveaux,
  • Catherine Belin,
  • Adrien Julian,
  • Isabelle Rouch-Leroyer,
  • Jérémie Pariente,
  • Maxime Locatelli,
  • Marie Chupin,
  • Geneviève Chêne,
  • Carole Dufouil,
  • on behalf of the Memento Cohort Study group

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13195-022-01013-8
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 11

Abstract

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Abstract Background This work aimed to investigate the potential pathways involved in the association between social and lifestyle factors, biomarkers of Alzheimer’s disease and related dementia (ADRD), and cognition. Methods The authors studied 2323 participants from the Memento study, a French nationwide clinical cohort. Social and lifestyle factors were education level, current household incomes, physical activity, leisure activities, and social network from which two continuous latent variables were computed: an early to midlife (EML) and a latelife (LL) indicator. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), lumbar puncture, and amyloid-positron emission tomography (PET) were used to define three latent variables: neurodegeneration, small vessel disease (SVD), and AD pathology. Cognitive function was defined as the underlying factor of a latent variable with four cognitive tests. Structural equation models were used to evaluate cross-sectional pathways between social and lifestyle factors and cognition. Results Participants’ mean age was 70.9 years old, 62% were women, 28% were apolipoprotein-ε4 carriers, and 59% had a Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) score of 0.5. Higher early to midlife social indicator was only directly associated with better cognitive function (direct β = 0.364 (0.322; 0.405), with no indirect pathway through ADRD biomarkers (total β = 0.392 (0.351; 0.429)). In addition to a direct effect on cognition (direct β = 0.076 (0.033; 0.118)), the association between latelife lifestyle indicator and cognition was also mostly mediated by an indirect effect through lower neurodegeneration (indirect β = 0.066 (0.042; 0.090) and direct β = − 0.116 (− 0.153; − 0.079)), but not through AD pathology nor SVD. Conclusions Early to midlife social factors are directly associated with higher cognitive functions. Latelife lifestyle factors may help preserve cognitive functions through lower neurodegeneration.

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