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The present study aimed to characterize profiles of cognitive aging and how these can be predicted from interindividual differences in demographic, lifestyle, health, and genetic factors.The participants were 1,966 older adults (mean baseline age = 71.6 years; 62.9% female), free from dementia at baseline and with at least two cognitive assessments over the 15-year follow-up, from the population-based Swedish National Study on Aging and Care in Kungsholmen.The cognitive assessment comprised tests of semantic and episodic memory, letter and category fluency, perceptual speed, and executive function.First, we estimated the level and change within each of the cognitive domains with linear mixed effect models, based on which we grouped our sample into participants with "maintained high cognition," "moderate cognitive decline," or "accelerated cognitive decline."Second, we analyzed determinants of group membership within each cognitive domain with multinomial logistic regression.Third, group memberships within each cognitive domain were used to derive general cognitive aging profiles with latent class analysis.Fourth, the determinants of these profile memberships were analyzed with multinomial logistic regression.Follow-up analyses targeted profiles and predictors specifically related to the rate of cognitive change.We identified three latent profiles of overall cognitive performance during the follow-up period with 31.6% of the sample having maintained high cognition, 50.6% having moderate cognitive decline, and 17.8% having accelerated cognitive decline.In multiadjusted analyses, maintained high cognition was predicted by female sex, higher education, and faster walking speed.Smoking, loneliness, and being an ε4 carrier were associated with a lower likelihood of maintained high cognition.Higher age, diagnosis of diabetes, depression, and carrying the apolipoprotein E ε4 allele increased the likelihood of accelerated cognitive decline.Factors at baseline that could significantly predict profile membership within the specific cognitive domains included age, sex, years of education, walking speed, diabetes, and the ε4 allele.Of note, these factors differed across cognitive domains.In sum, we identified demographic, lifestyle, health, and genetic factors of interindividual differences in domain-specific and general cognitive aging profiles, some of which are modifiable. Public Significance StatementThis study suggests that factors that are linked to maintaining relatively high levels of cognitive function in older age are not interchangeable from those that are linked to a relatively rapid loss of cognitive function.Our findings indicate that older adults who are female, have more years of formal schooling, have a faster walking speed, or are not currently smoking or experiencing feelings of loneliness may be more likely to exhibit good cognitive abilities and maintain these over a time span of 15 years.Our results also suggest that older adults who have a diagnosis of diabetes or depression or are carriers of the apolipoprotein E ε4 allele may be more likely to experience rapid cognitive decline.
Ekström et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
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