# The association between adult-life smoking and age-related cognitive decline in Danish men

**Authors:** Erik Lykke Mortensen, Kristine Hell, Gunhild Tidemann Okholm, Trine Flensborg-Madsen, Marie Grønkjær, Prakash K.C., Prakash K.C., Prakash K.C.

PMC · DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0319839 · PLOS One · 2025-03-19

## TL;DR

This study found that smoking has only a weak association with cognitive decline in Danish men, with pack-years and current smoking showing minor effects.

## Contribution

The study uses pack-years as a primary measure to assess the cumulative effect of smoking on cognitive decline.

## Key findings

- Smokers showed slightly less cognitive decline than non-smokers, but the effect was small.
- Heavy smokers experienced more cognitive decline than light smokers, suggesting a weak dose-response relationship.
- Current smoking was linked to greater cognitive decline than former smoking, independent of pack-years.

## Abstract

Most previous studies of effects of smoking on age-related cognitive decline have compared cognitive decline in current smokers, former smokers, and never smokers rather than investigating the effects of pack-years. The aim of the present study was to analyze the association between smoking and age-related cognitive decline in a sample of men administered the same intelligence test in young adulthood and late midlife, using pack-years between the two assessments as the primary measure of exposure to smoking.

In 5052 men, scores on a military intelligence test (BPP, Børge Priens Prøve) were available from young adulthood and a late midlife follow-up assessment including the same intelligence test and a comprehensive questionnaire on socio-demographic factors, lifestyle, and health. Information on smoking was self-reported at follow up for eight age periods, and pack-years were calculated from age 19 based on information on daily smoking and the duration of each age period. The differences in cognitive decline between adult-life smokers and non-smokers and the differences between light, moderate, and heavy smokers defined by pack-years were analyzed in linear regression models.

All smoking variables were only weakly associated with cognitive decline. Comparison of adult-life smokers and non-smokers showed less cognitive decline among smokers (1.12 IQ points, p <  0.001). Among smokers, analyses of pack-years suggested a weak dose-response relationship with more decline in heavy smokers than in light smokers (1.33 IQ points, p =  0.001). Independent of pack-years, current smoking was associated with larger cognitive decline than former smoking (1.73 IQ points, p <  0.001).

Smoking explained negligible fractions of the variance in cognitive decline, and thus our results did not indicate that smoking is a strong predictor of cognitive decline. The effects of pack-years suggest a relatively weak, possibly cumulative effect of smoking across the adult lifespan. The difference in decline between smokers and non-smokers may reflect participation bias and selective attrition at follow-up while the effects of current smoking may reflect either temporary effects of smoking or individual and life-style characteristics associated with continuation of smoking into late midlife.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** cognitive decline (MESH:D003072)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

48 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11922240/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC11922240