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Abstract Introduction Meta-analytic studies support that insomnia is a risk factor for cognitive decline and dementia, but limited accounting of confounders reduces their validity. Further, it is unclear whether these associations are driven by specific insomnia phenotypes. In this study, we aimed to assess the relationship between insomnia and longitudinal global cognitive decline in community-dwelling older adults after considering self-reported sleep duration changes and other important characteristics. Methods From the Mayo Clinic Study of Aging (MCSA) cohort, we identified all (age=50yo) cognitively unimpaired participants at baseline without comorbid neurological disease with at least two previous comprehensive neuropsychological evaluations. Participants with at least two occurrences of insomnia ICD diagnosis (by EMR and Rochester Epidemiological Project data) at least 30 days apart were classified as having insomnia, and those without any instance of diagnosis were considered negative for insomnia. Changes in sleep duration were assessed using the question #16 of BDI-2 and categorized in reduced sleep (yes/no). We fit mixed-effect regression models to assess whether insomnia was associated with standardized global cognitive scores, after adjusting for age, sex, education, APOEe4, composite cardiovascular and metabolic conditions scores, anxiety/depression, reduced sleep, OSA (ICD diagnosis), alcoholism (CAGE≥2), and pain (NSAIDs use). Number of cognitive assessments and time from baseline were included as both fixed and random effects. Multiple interactions (e.g. insomnia*reduced sleep) were included. A backward stepwise procedure maintaining the hierarchical principal for interactions was utilized to reach the most parsimonious models. Results 3063 participants (50.24% males, aged 70±9.73 at baseline) were included. Insomnia alone was not associated with a decrease in global cognition, but when combined with subjective reduction in sleep duration at baseline it was associated with a -0.19 (95% CI: -0.32, -0.07; interaction p=0.01) reduction in global cognitive scores. This was equivalent to approximately 3 additional years of age or 6 cardiometabolic comorbidities at baseline. The effect size was greater than those associated with baseline cognition for having any APOE e4 allele (-0.12) and alcoholism (-0.15). Conclusion Insomnia with reduced sleep duration phenotype is a potentially modifiable risk factor for cognitive decline in older adults. Further studies with objective sleep measures are necessary for objective confirmation. Support (if any) NIA/NIH
Carvalho et al. (Sat,) studied this question.
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