Impact of frailty status on the effect of a multidomain lifestyle intervention on cognition

IF 6 2区 医学 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY
Johanna Pöyhönen, Jenni Lehtisalo, Hanna-Maria Roitto, Esko Levälahti, Timo Strandberg, Miia Kivipelto, Jenni Kulmala, Riitta Antikainen, Hilkka Soininen, Jaakko Tuomilehto, Tiina Laatikainen, Tiia Ngandu
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Abstract

Background Frailty often precedes and co-occurs with dementia. A multidomain lifestyle intervention has shown favourable effects on cognition. We aimed to investigate if frailty status modifies this intervention effect. Methods The Finnish Geriatric Intervention Study to Prevent Cognitive Impairment and Disability (FINGER) recruited 1259 participants aged 60–77 years who were at risk of dementia. They were randomised to receive a multidomain intervention (diet, exercise, cognitive training and vascular risk monitoring) or regular health advice for two years. The outcome was a change in cognition (neuropsychological test battery composite score). Frailty and prefrailty were defined according to the Fried phenotype. Mixed models were used to investigate if frailty status at baseline modified the intervention effect on cognition. Results Frailty status (prefrail/frail n = 520, robust n = 625) at baseline did not modify the effect of intervention on global cognition during the 2-year follow-up (P-value for frailty × intervention × time interaction > .05). Concerning cognitive subdomains, similar results were found. Among prefrail/frail persons, within-group analyses suggested a beneficial intervention effect on executive function and processing speed and also on global cognition when frail participants (n = 15) were excluded from the analyses. Being prefrail/frail was related to less improvement in global cognition, memory and executive function domains compared with being robust when intervention was not taken into consideration. Conclusions A multidomain intervention is likely to be beneficial to cognition regardless of frailty status. Prefrail participants seemed particularly responsive to preventive intervention. Thus, an optimal time for a multidomain lifestyle intervention may be at the prefrailty stage.
虚弱状态对多领域生活方式干预对认知的影响
背景:虚弱常常先于痴呆,并与痴呆同时发生。多领域生活方式干预已显示出对认知的有利影响。我们的目的是研究虚弱状态是否会改变这种干预效果。方法芬兰老年干预研究预防认知障碍和残疾(FINGER)招募了1259名年龄在60-77岁之间有痴呆风险的参与者。他们被随机分配接受为期两年的多领域干预(饮食、运动、认知训练和血管风险监测)或定期健康建议。结果是认知的改变(神经心理测试电池综合得分)。根据Fried表型定义脆弱和脆弱。使用混合模型来研究基线时的虚弱状态是否改变了干预对认知的影响。结果基线时的虚弱状态(虚弱/虚弱n = 520,强壮n = 625)在2年随访期间并未改变干预对整体认知的影响(虚弱×干预×时间交互作用的p值&;gt;. 05)。关于认知子域,也发现了类似的结果。在体弱/体弱者中,组内分析表明,当体弱参与者(n = 15)被排除在分析之外时,干预对执行功能和处理速度以及全球认知有有益的影响。在不考虑干预的情况下,体弱/体弱与整体认知、记忆和执行功能领域的改善程度较弱。结论无论身体虚弱与否,多领域干预均有可能改善认知功能。体弱多病的参与者似乎对预防性干预特别敏感。因此,多领域生活方式干预的最佳时间可能是在初级阶段。
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来源期刊
Age and ageing
Age and ageing 医学-老年医学
CiteScore
9.20
自引率
6.00%
发文量
796
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Age and Ageing is an international journal publishing refereed original articles and commissioned reviews on geriatric medicine and gerontology. Its range includes research on ageing and clinical, epidemiological, and psychological aspects of later life.
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