BMJ Open (Mar 2024)

Attrition from longitudinal ageing studies and performance across domains of cognitive functioning: an individual participant data meta-analysis

  • Stefan Schneider,
  • Arthur A Stone,
  • Raymond Hernandez,
  • Haomiao Jin,
  • Pey-Jiuan Lee,
  • Doerte U Junghaenel,
  • Erik Meijer,
  • Hongxin Gao,
  • Daniel Maupin,
  • Elizabeth M Zelinski

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmjopen-2023-079241
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 3

Abstract

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Objectives This paper examined the magnitude of differences in performance across domains of cognitive functioning between participants who attrited from studies and those who did not, using data from longitudinal ageing studies where multiple cognitive tests were administered.Design Individual participant data meta-analysis.Participants Data are from 10 epidemiological longitudinal studies on ageing (total n=209 518) from several Western countries (UK, USA, Mexico, etc). Each study had multiple waves of data (range of 2–17 waves), with multiple cognitive tests administered at each wave (range of 4–17 tests). Only waves with cognitive tests and information on participant dropout at the immediate next wave for adults aged 50 years or older were used in the meta-analysis.Measures For each pair of consecutive study waves, we compared the difference in cognitive scores (Cohen’s d) between participants who dropped out at the next study wave and those who remained. Note that our operationalisation of dropout was inclusive of all causes (eg, mortality). The proportion of participant dropout at each wave was also computed.Results The average proportion of dropouts between consecutive study waves was 0.26 (0.18 to 0.34). People who attrited were found to have significantly lower levels of cognitive functioning in all domains (at the wave 2–3 years before attrition) compared with those who did not attrit, with small-to-medium effect sizes (overall d=0.37 (0.30 to 0.43)).Conclusions Older adults who attrited from longitudinal ageing studies had lower cognitive functioning (assessed at the timepoint before attrition) across all domains as compared with individuals who remained. Cognitive functioning differences may contribute to selection bias in longitudinal ageing studies, impeding accurate conclusions in developmental research. In addition, examining the functional capabilities of attriters may be valuable for determining whether attriters experience functional limitations requiring healthcare attention.