# Young Adult Substance Use as a Predictor of Poor Memory Decades Later in Midlife

**Authors:** Yuk Pang, Yvonne Terry-McElrath, Joy Bohyun Jang, Megan Patrick

PMC · DOI: 10.1093/geroni/igaf122.4050 · 2025-12-31

## TL;DR

Young adult heavy substance use, like alcohol and cannabis, is linked to poor memory in midlife, partly due to ongoing substance use problems in early midlife.

## Contribution

This study identifies long-term cognitive risks of young adult substance use and shows how early midlife substance use problems mediate these effects.

## Key findings

- Heavy alcohol and binge drinking in young adults increase the odds of poor memory in midlife.
- Early midlife substance use disorders partially or fully mediate the link between young adult substance use and later memory decline.
- Daily cigarette use in young adults is directly linked to poor memory in midlife without mediation.

## Abstract

Subjective memory decline is an early sign of cognitive decline and dementia. Understanding risk factors associated with midlife poor memory is crucial for effective prevention. This study prospectively examines associations between young adult (YA) heavy substance use and late midlife poor memory, and the mediating role of early midlife problematic substance use. Data on number of waves of YA (age 18-30) heavy alcohol, binge drinking, cannabis and cigarette use, early midlife (age 35) substance use disorder symptoms and heavy cigarette use, and late midlife poor self-rated memory (age 50-65) were from the Monitoring the Future (MTF) Panel study (N = 14,659). Mediation analyses assessed whether early midlife problematic substance use mediated YA heavy substance use associations with late midlife poor memory. YA heavy alcohol use and binge drinking were associated with higher odds of early midlife disordered (vs. non-disordered) alcohol use (AOR=1.69 and 1.66, both p<.001), and with late midlife poor memory (AOR=1.34 and 1.39, both p<.001). Partial mediation for alcohol (AOR=1.17, p<.001) and full mediation for binge drinking (AOR=1.18, p<.001) were observed. YA heavy cannabis use was associated with early midlife disordered use (vs. non-disordered; AOR=1.42, p<.001), and with late midlife poor memory (AOR 1.41, p = 0.008); full mediation (AOR=1.13, p = 0.010) was observed. YA daily cigarette use was directly associated with late midlife poor memory (AOR=1.05, p = 0.047), with no evidence of mediation. These findings underscore long-term risks of sustained YA substance use for cognition, and indicate that long-term associations may partially or completely operate through early midlife disordered substance use.

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12762653