Association of metabolic syndrome severity with cognitive decline among Chinese older adults: evidence from two prospective cohort studies
Ming Chen, Lu Liu, Na Liu, Ji-Wen Che, Yuan-Yuan Peng, Yan Zeng

TL;DR
Higher severity of metabolic syndrome is linked to faster cognitive decline in older Chinese adults, based on two large studies.
Contribution
This study introduces a continuous MetS score model to better capture severity and its impact on cognitive decline.
Findings
Higher baseline MetS scores were associated with faster global cognitive decline.
Participants with the highest cumulative MetS scores experienced more rapid memory decline.
Associations remained consistent across sensitivity analyses.
Abstract
The relationship between metabolic syndrome (MetS) severity and cognitive decline is not well understood, largely because the traditional binary diagnosis of MetS is unable to capture its continuous nature. This longitudinal study included 1,191 participants aged ≥ 60 years from the Hubei Memory and Aging Cohort Study (HMACS, 2016–2024) and 2,281 participants from the China Health and Retirement Longitudinal Study (CHARLS, 2011–2020). Annual rates of cognitive decline were calculated using standardized z-scores. An age-sex-ethnicity-specific MetS score model was used to calculate the MetS score for assessing MetS severity. The Cumulative MetS score was defined as (baseline MetS score + final MetS score)/2 × follow-up duration. The association between baseline and cumulative MetS score and annual rates of cognitive decline was evaluated using linear mixed models. Results from the two…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Diabetes, Cardiovascular Risks, and Lipoproteins · Nutritional Studies and Diet
