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Clinical laboratory tests and dementia incidence: A prospective cohort study
Dementia is a major public health issue and a heavy economic burden. It is urgently necessary to understand the underlying biological processes and to identify biomarkers predicting risk of dementia in the preclinical stage for prevention and treatment. By using the data of the 367,093 white British...
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Published in: | Journal of affective disorders 2024-04, Vol.351, p.1-7 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Dementia is a major public health issue and a heavy economic burden. It is urgently necessary to understand the underlying biological processes and to identify biomarkers predicting risk of dementia in the preclinical stage for prevention and treatment.
By using the data of the 367,093 white British individuals from UK Biobank, we investigated the relationship between 56 laboratory measures and 5-year dementia incidence using logistic regression. Adjusted odds ratios for dementia incidence with values below or above the 95 % confidence interval ( 97.5th percentile) on each of clinical laboratory tests were computed.
We observed that markers of endocrine dysregulation: elevated hemoglobin A1C (AOR = 2.01 [1.35, 2.88]) was associated with increased dementia incidence. Indicators of liver dysfunction: elevated gamma glutamyltransferase (AOR = 2.28 [1.49, 3.32]), and albumin (AOR = 2.01 [1.15, 3.25]), indicators of renal impairment: high urea (AOR = 1.69 [1.15, 2.40]), and cystatin C (AOR = 1.89 [1.30, 2.67]), and some immune markers, like elevated neutrophill count, low lymphocyte count, and indicators of anemia were also observed to be associated with increased dementia incidence. Both low and high concentrations of insulin-like growth factor 1 were found to be risk factors for dementia.
This is an observational study.
Several systemic biomarkers were associated with dementia incidence. These results implicate a contributory role of diverse biological processes to dementia onset, and enrich our understanding of potential dementia prevention strategy.
•We examined associations of serum lab tests with dementia incidence longitudinally.•Endocrine, liver, renal dysfunction, immunity, and anemia markers are linked to dementia.•Our findings suggest diverse biological processes contribute to dementia onset. |
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ISSN: | 0165-0327 1573-2517 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.jad.2024.01.226 |