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Association of Childhood and Midlife Neighborhood Socioeconomic Position With Cognitive Decline.


ABSTRACT:

Importance

Early-life socioeconomic adversity may be associated with poor cognitive health over the life course.

Objective

To examine the association of childhood and midlife neighborhood socioeconomic position (nSEP) with cognitive decline.

Design, setting, and participants

This cohort study included 5711 men and women enrolled in the community-based Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study with repeated cognitive data measured over a median 27.0 years (IQR, 26.0-27.9 years) (1990-2019). Statistical analysis was performed from December 2022 through March 2023.

Exposure

Residence addresses for ARIC Study cohort participants were obtained at midlife (1990-1993) and as recalled addresses at 10 years of age (childhood). A composite nSEP z score was created as a sum of z scores for US Census-based measures of median household income; median value of owner-occupied housing units; percentage of households receiving interest, dividend, or net rental income; percentage of adults with a high school degree; percentage of adults with a college degree; and percentage of adults in professional, managerial, or executive occupations. Childhood nSEP and midlife nSEP were modeled as continuous measures and discretized into tertiles.

Main outcomes and measures

A factor score for global cognition was derived from a battery of cognitive tests administered at 5 in-person visits from baseline to 2019. The rate of cognitive decline from 50 to 90 years of age was calculated by fitting mixed-effects linear regression models with age as the time scale and adjusted for race, sex, birth decade, educational level, and presence of the apolipoprotein E ε4 allele.

Results

Among 5711 ARIC Study participants (mean [SD] baseline age, 55.1 [4.7] years; 3372 women [59.0%]; and 1313 Black participants [23.0%]), the median rate of cognitive decline was -0.33 SDs (IQR, -0.49 to -0.20 SDs) per decade. In adjusted analyses, each 1-SD-higher childhood nSEP score was associated with a slower (β, -9.2%; 95% CI, -12.1% to -6.4%) rate of cognitive decline relative to the sample median. A comparable association was observed when comparing the highest tertile with the lowest tertile of childhood nSEP (β, -17.7%; 95% CI, -24.1% to -11.3%). Midlife nSEP was not associated with the rate of cognitive decline.

Conclusions and relevance

In this cohort study of contextual factors associated with cognitive decline, childhood nSEP was inversely associated with trajectories of cognitive function throughout adulthood.

SUBMITTER: Kucharska-Newton AM 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC10403777 | biostudies-literature | 2023 Aug

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Publications

Association of Childhood and Midlife Neighborhood Socioeconomic Position With Cognitive Decline.

Kucharska-Newton Anna M AM   Pike James Russell JR   Chen Jinyu J   Coresh Josef J   Sharret A Richey AR   Mosley Thomas T   Palta Priya P  

JAMA network open 20230801 8


<h4>Importance</h4>Early-life socioeconomic adversity may be associated with poor cognitive health over the life course.<h4>Objective</h4>To examine the association of childhood and midlife neighborhood socioeconomic position (nSEP) with cognitive decline.<h4>Design, setting, and participants</h4>This cohort study included 5711 men and women enrolled in the community-based Atherosclerosis Risk in Communities (ARIC) Study with repeated cognitive data measured over a median 27.0 years (IQR, 26.0-2  ...[more]

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