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Glycated Peptide Levels Are Associated With Cognitive Decline Among Nondiabetic Older Women.

Abstract

Background

The association between diabetes and dementia may be explained in part by elevated levels of glycated peptides; we sought to determine whether serum-glycated peptides predicted cognitive decline in nondiabetic older adults.

Methods

We prospectively studied 525 community-dwelling nondiabetic women, mean age of 82 years, and analyzed baseline glycated peptides (serum level of fructosamine and glycated albumin). Cognitive outcomes included 5-year decline on the short Mini-Mental State Examination (sMMSE), Trails B, and performance on a battery of five other cognitive tests at the follow-up visit. Generalized linear models were adjusted for education, age, race, physical activity, body mass index, and vascular disease.

Results

Women with higher level of fructosamine (upper two tertiles) had greater 5-year decline in Trails B performance compared with women in the lowest tertile (adjusted mean change = 67 vs 50 seconds, p = .046), but change in sMMSE was not different between groups. Higher fructosamine was also associated with worse cognitive function 5 years later: adjusted mean score for the California Verbal Learning Test-II Short Form was 22.7 versus 23.9 (p = .010) and for Category Fluency was 10.1 versus 11.1 (p = .003). Higher glycated albumin was also associated with worse performance on Category Fluency (10.1 vs 11.1, p = .003) but not on any other test.

Conclusions

Among older nondiabetic women, higher concentrations of glycated peptides may be associated with greater cognitive decline, especially in measures of executive function. These associations may present new opportunities for targeted prevention and therapeutic strategies in cognitive aging.

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