The Relationship Between Prior Cancer Diagnosis and All-Cause Dementia Progression Among US Adults.

Mackenzie E. Fowler, N. Wright, K. Triebel, G. Rocque, R. Irvin, R. Kennedy
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

BACKGROUND Cancer-related cognitive impairment (CRCI), a frequent effect of cancer and its treatments, shares common cognitive symptoms with dementia syndromes. Cross-sectional studies demonstrate an inverse relationship between cancer and dementia. However, the longitudinal relationship between dementia decline and cancer has not been investigated. OBJECTIVE To evaluate the association between cancer and longitudinal progression of dementia. METHODS We extracted electronic health record data from July 2003 to February 2020 from a single academic medical center. We identified dementia and cancer history prior to dementia using ICD-9/10 codes. We measured cognitive decline with the Alabama Brief Cognitive Screener (ABCs). We used adjusted linear mixed models to estimate baseline cognition and rate of progression by cancer history, including differences by race. RESULTS The study included 3,809 participants with dementia, of which 672 (17.6%) had cancer history. Those with cancer history had higher baseline cognition (β: 0.62, 95% CI: -0.02-1.25), but similar rate of decline. Non-Hispanic Blacks had lower cognitive scores at baseline and throughout follow-up regardless of cancer status compared to non-Hispanic Whites and other races/ethnicities with and without cancer history. CONCLUSION In this longitudinal retrospective study, participants with cancer history demonstrate better cognition at dementia diagnosis and no difference in cognitive decline than those without cancer history. Smoking and comorbidities attenuate this association and results indicate non-Hispanic Blacks have worse cognitive outcomes in dementia regardless of cancer history than other race/ethnicity groups. Further exploration of the role of smoking, comorbidities, and race/ethnicity on cancer and dementia-related cognitive decline is needed.
美国成年人既往癌症诊断与全因痴呆进展之间的关系
癌症相关认知障碍(CRCI)是癌症及其治疗的常见后果,与痴呆综合征具有共同的认知症状。横断面研究表明癌症和痴呆之间呈反比关系。然而,痴呆下降和癌症之间的纵向关系尚未被调查。目的探讨癌症与痴呆纵向进展的关系。方法我们从一个学术医疗中心提取2003年7月至2020年2月的电子健康记录数据。我们使用ICD-9/10代码确定痴呆和痴呆之前的癌症病史。我们用阿拉巴马简短认知筛选(abc)来测量认知衰退。我们使用调整后的线性混合模型来估计基线认知和癌症病史的进展速度,包括种族差异。结果该研究包括3809名痴呆患者,其中672名(17.6%)有癌症病史。有癌症病史的患者有更高的基线认知能力(β: 0.62, 95% CI: -0.02-1.25),但下降率相似。与非西班牙裔白人和其他有或没有癌症病史的种族/民族相比,非西班牙裔黑人在基线和整个随访期间的认知得分较低,无论癌症状况如何。结论在这项纵向回顾性研究中,有癌症病史的参与者在痴呆诊断中表现出更好的认知能力,认知能力下降与没有癌症病史的参与者没有差异。吸烟和合并症减弱了这种关联,结果表明,非西班牙裔黑人在痴呆方面的认知结果比其他种族/民族更差,无论癌症病史如何。需要进一步探索吸烟、合并症和种族/民族在癌症和痴呆相关认知能力下降中的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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