Association between Cumulative BMI and Cognitive Decline: a 24-Year Cohort Study
Qianhui Xu, Meng Hsuan Sung, Zhuo Chen, Janani Rajbhandari-Thapa, Grace Bagwell Adams, M. Mahmud Khan, Ye Shen, Xiao Song, Xia Song, Suhang Song

TL;DR
This study finds that long-term weight management is important for preventing cognitive decline, with the strongest effects observed eight years after high BMI.
Contribution
The study introduces cumulative average BMI (caBMI) as a novel metric to assess long-term BMI impact on cognitive decline.
Findings
A 100-unit increase in caBMI was significantly linked to faster cognitive decline in memory, executive function, and global cognition.
The strongest cognitive decline rates associated with caBMI occurred eight years after the study's start.
Older adults (≥65 years) showed greater cognitive decline related to caBMI.
Abstract
Background: High Body Mass Index (BMI) is linked to poor cognitive performance, yet few studies have examined the long-term impact of cumulative BMI (cBMI) on cognitive health. This study explores the association between cBMI and cognitive decline and identifies the critical time window when cBMI has the strongest impact. Methods: Data were obtained from the Health and Retirement Study (1996–2020). Cognitive health was assessed using a standardized composite score of memory and executive function. Cumulative BMI was calculated as the area under the curve of BMI over time, and cumulative average BMI (caBMI) was computed as the mean of cBMI values over the follow-up period. Linear mixed models assessed the associations between caBMI and cognitive decline, adjusting for sociodemographic and health factors. Results: Among 8,252 cognitively healthy participants (mean age 58.6 years, 58.3%…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDiet and metabolism studies · Birth, Development, and Health · Bariatric Surgery and Outcomes
