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[O1–04–03]: NEIGHBORHOOD SOCIOECONOMIC CONTEXTUAL DISADVANTAGE, BASELINE COGNITION AND ALZHEIMER's DISEASE BIOMARKERS IN THE WISCONSIN REGISTRY FOR ALZHEIMER's PREVENTION (WRAP) STUDY
Author(s) -
Kind Amy J.,
Bendlin Barbara B.,
Kim Alice J.,
Koscik Rebecca L.,
Buckingham William R.,
Gleason Carey E.,
Blennow Kaj,
Zetterberg Henrik,
Carlsson Cynthia M.,
Johnson Sterling C.
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
alzheimer's and dementia
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 6.713
H-Index - 118
eISSN - 1552-5279
pISSN - 1552-5260
DOI - 10.1016/j.jalz.2017.07.054
Subject(s) - disadvantage , disadvantaged , socioeconomic status , decile , gerontology , dementia , health equity , demography , medicine , cohort , psychology , disease , public health , environmental health , population , political science , law , statistics , mathematics , nursing , pathology , sociology
Background: By 2060 there will be 9.5 million individuals age 90+ in the United States and over one third will be NonWhite. In younger elderly, there are marked differences in rates of dementia by racial/ethnic groups, showing increased rates for Blacks and decreased rates for Asians. However, it is completely unknown if these discrepancies also occur in the oldest-old. Methods: We established a cohort of 2,351 members of Kaiser Permanente Northern California (KPNC) health-plan who, in 2010, were >age 90, with no diagnoses of dementia. Dementia diagnoses (ICD-9 codes 331.0, 290.0-290.4x, 294.1, 294.2x, and 294.8) made in primary care, neurology, memory clinics, and psychiatry were abstracted from electronic medical records from 1/1/201012/31/2015. We estimated dementia incidence rates standardized to the 2000 US Census 90+ year-old population by race/ethnicity. Cox proportional hazard models (age as time scale) evaluated the association between racial/ethnic groups and dementia risk. Participants were censored at dementia diagnosis, death, >90 day gap in health plan membership, or end of study. Results:The mean age in 2010 was 93.1 (range: 90-109). The cohort is 65% female, 72%White (N1⁄41,702), 16% Black (N1⁄4375), 4% Latino (N1⁄4105) and 7% Asian (N1⁄4169). 771 members (32.8%) were diagnosed with dementia during the 5-year follow-up period. The mean age of dementia diagnosis was 95.48 (SE1⁄40.10) and was similar across racial and ethnic groups: 95.56 (SE1⁄40.11) for Whites, 95.21 (SE1⁄40.23) for Blacks, 95.71 (SE1⁄40.66) for Latinos, 95.28 (SE1⁄40.31) for Asians. The overall age-adjusted incidence rate (aIR) was 100.5 per 1,000 person-years. Asians had the lowest incidence rates (aIR1⁄489.3), followed by Whites (aIR1⁄497.0), Latinos (aIR1⁄4105.8), and, lastly, Blacks who had the highest rates (aIR1⁄4121.5). In cox proportional hazard models adjusted for age as the time scale, education, sex, midlife and late-life vascular comorbidities, Blacks had significantly higher risk (aHR1⁄41.28; 95%CI: 1.05-1.51), compared to Whites. Conclusions: These are the first estimates of dementia incidence in a diverse cohort of 90+ individuals. Patterns of racial/ethnic disparities in dementia seen in younger elderly continue after age 90. These estimates provide an important foundation for understanding the burden of racial disparities in dementia in the oldest-old, the fastest growing segment of the population.
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