Does Frailty Modify the Associations of Late-Life Vascular Risk Factors With Incident Dementia?
Jason Smith, A Richey Sharrett, Priya Palta, B Gwen Windham, Pamela Lutsey, Alden Gross, Jennifer Deal

TL;DR
This study explores how frailty affects the link between high blood pressure and dementia risk in older adults.
Contribution
The study identifies that frailty modifies the association between elevated blood pressure and dementia risk in older adults.
Findings
Frailty status modifies the association between elevated blood pressure and dementia risk.
Diabetes and smoking increase dementia risk regardless of frailty status.
Hypertension poses a higher dementia risk in robust individuals compared to frail ones.
Abstract
The contribution of late-life vascular risk factors—hypertension in particular—to dementia remains controversial. Given the association of frailty with lower blood pressure (BP) specifically, we hypothesized that hypertension, but not diabetes or smoking, is more strongly associated with dementia risk in robust than in pre-frail/frail older adults. We used Cox proportional hazards models, adjusted for demographic and clinical/lifestyle characteristics, with a multiplicative interaction term between vascular risk factors and physical frailty (robust versus pre-frail/frail) to estimate cause-specific hazard ratios (HRs) of 11-year incident dementia associated with elevated BP, hypertension, diabetes and current smoking in community-living White and Black participants aged 67-89 years without dementia in the Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities Neurocognitive Study. We then stratified HRs…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Frailty in Older Adults · Chronic Disease Management Strategies
