Prenatal Exposure to the 1944-45 Dutch Famine and Risk for Dementia up to Age 75: An Analysis of Primary Care Data.

Aline Marileen Wiegersma, Amber Boots, Emma F van Bussel, Birgit I Lissenberg-Witte, Mark M J Nielen, Tessa J Roseboom, Susanne R de Rooij
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Abstract

Background: A poor prenatal environment adversely affects brain development. Studies investigating long-term consequences of prenatal exposure to the 1944-45 Dutch famine have shown that those exposed to famine in early gestation had poorer selective attention, smaller brain volumes, poorer brain perfusion, older appearing brains, and increased reporting of cognitive problems, all indicative of increased dementia risk.

Objective: In the current population-based study, we investigated whether dementia incidence up to age 75 was higher among individuals who had been prenatally exposed to famine.

Methods: We included men (n=6,714) and women (n=7,051) from the Nivel Primary Care Database who had been born in seven cities affected by the Dutch famine. We used Cox regression to compare dementia incidence among individuals exposed to famine during late (1,231), mid (1,083), or early gestation (601) with those unexposed (born before or conceived after the famine).

Results: We did not observe differences in dementia incidence for those exposed to famine in mid or early gestation compared to those unexposed. Men and women exposed to famine in late gestation had significantly lower dementia rates compared to unexposed individuals (HR 0.52 (95%CI 0.30-0.89)). Sex-specific analyses showed a lower dementia rate in women exposed to famine in late gestation (HR 0.39 (95%CI 0.17-0.86)) but not in men (HR 0.68 (95%CI 0.33-1.41)).

Conclusion: Although prenatal exposure to the Dutch famine has previously been associated with measures of accelerated brain aging, the present population-based study did not show increased dementia incidence up to age 75 in those exposed to famine during gestation.

产前暴露于 1944-45 年荷兰大饥荒与 75 岁前痴呆症风险:初级保健数据分析。
背景:恶劣的产前环境会对大脑发育产生不利影响。对产前暴露于 1944-45 年荷兰饥荒的长期后果进行的调查研究表明,那些在妊娠早期暴露于饥荒的人选择性注意力较差、脑容量较小、脑灌注较差、大脑显现较老、报告认知问题的次数增多,所有这些都表明痴呆症风险增加:在目前这项基于人群的研究中,我们调查了产前遭受过饥荒的人在 75 岁之前的痴呆症发病率是否更高:我们从 Nivel 初级医疗数据库中纳入了出生在受荷兰饥荒影响的七个城市的男性(n=6714)和女性(n=7051)。我们使用 Cox 回归法比较了在妊娠晚期(1,231 人)、中期(1,083 人)或早期(601 人)遭受饥荒的人与未遭受饥荒的人(在饥荒前出生或在饥荒后受孕)的痴呆症发病率:我们没有观察到妊娠中期或早期遭受饥荒的人与未遭受饥荒的人在痴呆症发病率上存在差异。与未接触过饥荒的人相比,妊娠晚期接触过饥荒的男性和女性痴呆症发病率明显较低(HR 0.52 [95%CI 0.30-0.89])。性别特异性分析显示,妊娠晚期遭受饥荒的女性痴呆率较低(HR 0.39 [95%CI 0.17-0.86]),但男性痴呆率较低(HR 0.68 [95%CI 0.33-1.41]):尽管产前遭受荷兰饥荒与大脑加速衰老有关,但本人口研究并未显示妊娠期遭受饥荒的人群在75岁之前痴呆症发病率增加。
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