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Longitudinal Changes of Cognition and Frailty With All-Cause and Cause-Specific Mortality in Chinese Older Adults: An 11-Year Cohort Study
Abstract Background and Objectives Physical function deterioration is always accompanied by a cognitive decline in older adults. However, evidence is lacking for the long-term simultaneous changing patterns of cognition and physical frailty and their associations with mortality among older adults. R...
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Published in: | Innovation in aging 2023-11, Vol.7 (9), p.igad114-igad114 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Citations: | Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Abstract
Background and Objectives
Physical function deterioration is always accompanied by a cognitive decline in older adults. However, evidence is lacking for the long-term simultaneous changing patterns of cognition and physical frailty and their associations with mortality among older adults.
Research Design and Methods
This study included 8,231 adults aged ≥65 with a baseline and at least one follow-up assessment of both cognition and physical frailty from the 2007–2018 Chinese Longitudinal Healthy Longevity Survey. Physical frailty (FRAIL phenotype) and cognition (Mini-Mental State Examination) were applied. Group-based joint trajectory modeling was used to fit the joint trajectories of cognition and physical frailty. Cox proportional hazards model was used to evaluate the trajectory-mortality associations.
Results
Three distinct joint trajectories were identified: no joint progression (34.4%), moderate joint progression (47.0%), and rapid joint progression (18.6%). During a median follow-up of 8.3 years, the rapid joint progression group, compared to the no joint progression, had the highest risk for all-cause mortality (hazard ratio (HR), 3.37 [95% CI: 2.99–3.81]), cardiovascular (CVD) mortality (3.21 [2.08–4.96]) and non-CVD mortality (2.99 [2.28–3.92]), respectively. Joint trajectory was found to be more predictive of mortality as compared to baseline measures of cognition and/or frailty (C-statistic ranged from 0.774 to 0.798). Higher changing rates of cognition and frailty were observed among all-cause decedents compared to CVD and non-CVD decedents over a 45-year span (aged 65–110) before death.
Discussion and Implications
Our study suggested that subjects with the worst cognitive decline and severest physical frailty progression were at the highest risk for all-cause and cause-specific mortality. Our findings expand the limited prior knowledge on the dynamic course of cognition and frailty. |
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ISSN: | 2399-5300 2399-5300 |
DOI: | 10.1093/geroni/igad114 |