Type 2 Diabetes as a Risk Factor for Dementia in Women Compared With Men: A Pooled Analysis of 2.3 Million People Comprising More Than 100,000 Cases of Dementia

Saion Chatterjee(Alfred Health), Sanne A. E. Peters(The George Institute for Global Health), Mark Woodward(The University of Sydney), Silvia Mejía-Arango(El Colegio de la Frontera Norte), G. David Batty(Alzheimer Scotland), Nigel Beckett(Imperial College London), Alexa Beiser(Boston University), Amy R. Borenstein(University of South Florida), Paul K. Crane(University of Washington), Mary N. Haan(University of California, San Francisco), Linda B. Hassing(University of Gothenburg), Kathleen M. Hayden(Wake Forest University), Yutaka Kiyohara(Kyushu University), Eric B. Larson(Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute), Chung‐Yi Li(National Cheng Kung University), Toshiharu Ninomiya(Kyushu University), Tomoyuki Ohara(Kyushu University), Ruth Peters(Imperial College London), Tom C. Russ(Alzheimer Scotland), Sudha Seshadri(Boston University), Bjørn Heine Strand(Norwegian Institute of Public Health), Rod Walker(Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute), Weili Xu(Stockholm University), Rachel Huxley(The University of Sydney)
Diabetes Care
December 17, 2015
Cited by 702Open Access
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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Type 2 diabetes confers a greater excess risk of cardiovascular disease in women than in men. Diabetes is also a risk factor for dementia, but whether the association is similar in women and men remains unknown. We performed a meta-analysis of unpublished data to estimate the sex-specific relationship between women and men with diabetes with incident dementia. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: A systematic search identified studies published prior to November 2014 that had reported on the prospective association between diabetes and dementia. Study authors contributed unpublished sex-specific relative risks (RRs) and 95% CIs on the association between diabetes and all dementia and its subtypes. Sex-specific RRs and the women-to-men ratio of RRs (RRRs) were pooled using random-effects meta-analyses. RESULTS: Study-level data from 14 studies, 2,310,330 individuals, and 102,174 dementia case patients were included. In multiple-adjusted analyses, diabetes was associated with a 60% increased risk of any dementia in both sexes (women: pooled RR 1.62 [95% CI 1.45-1.80]; men: pooled RR 1.58 [95% CI 1.38-1.81]). The diabetes-associated RRs for vascular dementia were 2.34 (95% CI 1.86-2.94) in women and 1.73 (95% CI 1.61-1.85) in men, and for nonvascular dementia, the RRs were 1.53 (95% CI 1.35-1.73) in women and 1.49 (95% CI 1.31-1.69) in men. Overall, women with diabetes had a 19% greater risk for the development of vascular dementia than men (multiple-adjusted RRR 1.19 [95% CI 1.08-1.30]; P < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Individuals with type 2 diabetes are at ∼60% greater risk for the development of dementia compared with those without diabetes. For vascular dementia, but not for nonvascular dementia, the additional risk is greater in women.


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