TY - JOUR
T1 - Cognitive and social activities and long-term dementia risk
T2 - the prospective UK Million Women Study
AU - Floud, Sarah
AU - Balkwill, Angela
AU - Sweetland, Siân
AU - Brown, Anna
AU - Reus, Elsa Mauricio
AU - Hofman, Albert
AU - Blacker, Deborah
AU - Kivimaki, Mika
AU - Green, Jane
AU - Peto, Richard
AU - Reeves, Gillian K.
AU - Beral, Valerie
N1 - Funding Information:
This work was funded by the UK Medical Research Council (MR/K02700X/1) and Cancer Research UK (C570/A16491 and A29186). SF also received a Medical Research Council–National Institutes of Health neurodegeneration partnering award (MR/S02249X/1). The authors thank the women who have participated in the Million Women Study as well as the staff from the participating NHS breast screening centres ( appendix p 11 ). We thank NHS Digital in England and NHS Central Register and Information Services Division in Scotland for the hospital admission data. Thanks are also due to Adrian Goodill (Cancer Epidemiology Unit, Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford) for drawing the figures.
Funding Information:
This work was funded by the UK Medical Research Council (MR/K02700X/1) and Cancer Research UK (C570/A16491 and A29186). SF also received a Medical Research Council?National Institutes of Health neurodegeneration partnering award (MR/S02249X/1). The authors thank the women who have participated in the Million Women Study as well as the staff from the participating NHS breast screening centres (appendix p 11). We thank NHS Digital in England and NHS Central Register and Information Services Division in Scotland for the hospital admission data. Thanks are also due to Adrian Goodill (Cancer Epidemiology Unit, Nuffield Department of Population Health, University of Oxford) for drawing the figures.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license
PY - 2021/2
Y1 - 2021/2
N2 - Background: Although dementia is associated with non-participation in cognitive and social activities, this association might merely reflect the consequences of dementia, rather than any direct effect of non-participation on the subsequent incidence of dementia. Because of the slowness with which dementia can develop, unbiased assessment of any such direct effects must relate non-participation in such activities to dementia detection rates many years later. Prospective studies with long-term follow-up can help achieve this by analysing separately the first and second decade of follow-up. We report such analyses of a large, 20-year study. Methods: The UK Million Women Study is a population-based prospective study of 1·3 million women invited for National Health Service (NHS) breast cancer screening in median year 1998 (IQR 1997–1999). In median year 2001 (IQR 2001–2003), women were asked about participation in adult education, groups for art, craft, or music, and voluntary work, and in median year 2006 (IQR 2006–2006), they were asked about reading. All participants were followed up through electronic linkage to NHS records of hospital admission with mention of dementia, the first mention of which was the main outcome. Comparing non-participation with participation in a particular activity, we used Cox regression to assess fully adjusted dementia risk ratios (RRs) during 0–4, 5–9, and 10 or more years, after information on that activity was obtained. Findings: In 2001, 851 307 women with a mean age of 60 years (SD 5) provided information on participation in adult education, groups for art, craft, or music, and voluntary work. After 10 years, only 9591 (1%) had been lost to follow-up and 789 339 (93%) remained alive with no recorded dementia. Follow-up was for a mean of 16 years (SD 3), during which 31 187 (4%) had at least one hospital admission with mention of dementia, including 25 636 (3%) with a hospital admission with dementia mentioned for the first time 10 years or more after follow-up began. Non-participation in cognitive or social activities was associated with higher relative risks of dementia detection only during the first decade after participation was recorded. During the second decade, there was little association. This was true for non-participation in adult education (RR 1·04, 99% CI 0·98–1·09), in groups for art, craft, or music (RR 1·04, 0·99–1·09), in voluntary work (RR 0·96, 0·92–1·00), or in any of these three (RR 0·99, 0·95–1·03). In 2006, 655 118 women provided information on reading. For non-reading versus any reading, there were similar associations with dementia, again with strong attenuation over time since reading was recorded, but longer follow-up is needed to assess this reliably. Interpretation: Life has to be lived forwards, but can be understood only backwards. Long before dementia is diagnosed, there is a progressive reduction in various mental and physical activities, but this is chiefly because its gradual onset causes inactivity and not because inactivity causes dementia. Funding: UK Medical Research Council, Cancer Research UK.
AB - Background: Although dementia is associated with non-participation in cognitive and social activities, this association might merely reflect the consequences of dementia, rather than any direct effect of non-participation on the subsequent incidence of dementia. Because of the slowness with which dementia can develop, unbiased assessment of any such direct effects must relate non-participation in such activities to dementia detection rates many years later. Prospective studies with long-term follow-up can help achieve this by analysing separately the first and second decade of follow-up. We report such analyses of a large, 20-year study. Methods: The UK Million Women Study is a population-based prospective study of 1·3 million women invited for National Health Service (NHS) breast cancer screening in median year 1998 (IQR 1997–1999). In median year 2001 (IQR 2001–2003), women were asked about participation in adult education, groups for art, craft, or music, and voluntary work, and in median year 2006 (IQR 2006–2006), they were asked about reading. All participants were followed up through electronic linkage to NHS records of hospital admission with mention of dementia, the first mention of which was the main outcome. Comparing non-participation with participation in a particular activity, we used Cox regression to assess fully adjusted dementia risk ratios (RRs) during 0–4, 5–9, and 10 or more years, after information on that activity was obtained. Findings: In 2001, 851 307 women with a mean age of 60 years (SD 5) provided information on participation in adult education, groups for art, craft, or music, and voluntary work. After 10 years, only 9591 (1%) had been lost to follow-up and 789 339 (93%) remained alive with no recorded dementia. Follow-up was for a mean of 16 years (SD 3), during which 31 187 (4%) had at least one hospital admission with mention of dementia, including 25 636 (3%) with a hospital admission with dementia mentioned for the first time 10 years or more after follow-up began. Non-participation in cognitive or social activities was associated with higher relative risks of dementia detection only during the first decade after participation was recorded. During the second decade, there was little association. This was true for non-participation in adult education (RR 1·04, 99% CI 0·98–1·09), in groups for art, craft, or music (RR 1·04, 0·99–1·09), in voluntary work (RR 0·96, 0·92–1·00), or in any of these three (RR 0·99, 0·95–1·03). In 2006, 655 118 women provided information on reading. For non-reading versus any reading, there were similar associations with dementia, again with strong attenuation over time since reading was recorded, but longer follow-up is needed to assess this reliably. Interpretation: Life has to be lived forwards, but can be understood only backwards. Long before dementia is diagnosed, there is a progressive reduction in various mental and physical activities, but this is chiefly because its gradual onset causes inactivity and not because inactivity causes dementia. Funding: UK Medical Research Council, Cancer Research UK.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85099810669&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1016/S2468-2667(20)30284-X
DO - 10.1016/S2468-2667(20)30284-X
M3 - Article
C2 - 33516288
AN - SCOPUS:85099810669
SN - 2468-2667
VL - 6
SP - e116-e123
JO - The Lancet Public Health
JF - The Lancet Public Health
IS - 2
ER -