- Leung, Yvonne;
- Barzilai, Nir;
- Batko‐Szwaczka, Agnieszka;
- Beker, Nina;
- Boerner, Kathrin;
- Brayne, Carol;
- Brodaty, Henry;
- Cheung, Karen Siu‐Lan;
- Corrada, María M;
- Crawford, John D;
- Galbussera, Alessia A;
- Gondo, Yasuyuki;
- Holstege, Henne;
- Hulsman, Marc;
- Ishioka, Yoshiko Lily;
- Jopp, Daniela;
- Kawas, Claudia H;
- Kaye, Jeff;
- Kochan, Nicole A;
- Lau, Bobo Hi‐Po;
- Lipnicki, Darren M;
- Lo, Jessica W;
- Lucca, Ugo;
- Makkar, Steve R;
- Marcon, Gabriella;
- Martin, Peter;
- Meguro, Kenichi;
- Milman, Sofiya;
- Poon, Leonard W;
- Recchia, Angela;
- Ribeiro, Oscar;
- Riva, Emma;
- Rott, Christoph;
- Sikkes, Sietske AM;
- Skoog, Ingmar;
- Stephan, Blossom;
- Szewieczek, Jan;
- Teixeira, Laetitia;
- Tettamanti, Mauro;
- Wilczyński, Krzysztof;
- Sachdev, Perminder
Introduction
There are limited data on prevalence of dementia in centenarians and near-centenarians (C/NC), its determinants, and whether the risk of dementia continues to rise beyond 100.Methods
Participant-level data were obtained from 18 community-based studies (N = 4427) in 11 countries that included individuals ≥95 years. A harmonization protocol was applied to cognitive and functional impairments, and a meta-analysis was performed.Results
The mean age was 98.3 years (SD = 2.67); 79% were women. After adjusting for age, sex, and education, dementia prevalence was 53.2% in women and 45.5% in men, with risk continuing to increase with age. Education (OR 0.95;0.92-0.98) was protective, as was hypertension (odds ratio [OR] 0.51;0.35-0.74) in five studies. Dementia was not associated with diabetes, vision and hearing impairments, smoking, and body mass index (BMI).Discussion
Among the exceptional old, dementia prevalence remains higher in the older participants. Education was protective against dementia, but other factors for dementia-free survival in C/NC remain to be understood.