Twenty-seven-year time trends in dementia incidence in Europe and the United States

Frank J. Wolters(Erasmus MC), Lori B. Chibnik(Massachusetts General Hospital), Reem Waziry(Bose (United States)), Roy M. Anderson(Bose (United States)), Claudine Berr(Bose (United States)), Alexa Beiser(Boston University), Joshua C. Bis(Bose (United States)), Deborah Blacker(Massachusetts General Hospital), Daniël Bos(Erasmus MC), Carol Brayne(University of Cambridge), Jean-François Dartigues(Bose (United States)), Sirwan K.L. Darweesh(Bose (United States)), Kendra Davis‐Plourde(Erasmus MC), Frank de Wolf(Boston University), Stéphanie Debette(Bose (United States)), Carole Dufouil(Bose (United States)), Myriam Fornage(Bose (United States)), Jaap Goudsmit(Bose (United States)), Leslie Grasset(Bose (United States)), Vilmundur Guðnason(Icelandic Heart Association), Christoforos Hadjichrysanthou(Bose (United States)), Catherine Helmer(Bose (United States)), M. Arfan Ikram(Bose (United States)), Muhammad Ikram(Erasmus MC), Erik Joas(Bose (United States)), Silke Kern(Bose (United States)), Lewis H. Kuller(Bose (United States)), Lenore J. Launer(Bose (United States)), Oscar L. Lopez(Bose (United States)), Fiona E. Matthews(Bose (United States)), Kevin McRae‐McKee(Bose (United States)), Osorio Meirelles(Bose (United States)), Thomas H. Mosley(Jackson Memorial Hospital), Matthew P. Pase(Florey Institute of Neuroscience and Mental Health), Bruce M. Psaty(Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute), Claudia L. Satizábal(Institute for Neurodegenerative Disorders), Sudha Seshadri(Erasmus MC), Ingmar Skoog(Bose (United States)), Blossom C.M. Stephan(Bose (United States)), Hanna Wetterberg(Erasmus MC), Mei Mei Wong(Bose (United States)), Anna Zettergren(Erasmus MC), Albert Hofman(Erasmus MC)
Neurology
July 2, 2020
Cited by 473Open Access
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Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To determine changes in the incidence of dementia between 1988 and 2015. METHODS: This analysis was performed in aggregated data from individuals >65 years of age in 7 population-based cohort studies in the United States and Europe from the Alzheimer Cohort Consortium. First, we calculated age- and sex-specific incidence rates for all-cause dementia, and then defined nonoverlapping 5-year epochs within each study to determine trends in incidence. Estimates of change per 10-year interval were pooled and results are presented combined and stratified by sex. RESULTS: Of 49,202 individuals, 4,253 (8.6%) developed dementia. The incidence rate of dementia increased with age, similarly for women and men, ranging from about 4 per 1,000 person-years in individuals aged 65-69 years to 65 per 1,000 person-years for those aged 85-89 years. The incidence rate of dementia declined by 13% per calendar decade (95% confidence interval [CI], 7%-19%), consistently across studies, and somewhat more pronouncedly in men than in women (24% [95% CI 14%-32%] vs 8% [0%-15%]). CONCLUSION: The incidence rate of dementia in Europe and North America has declined by 13% per decade over the past 25 years, consistently across studies. Incidence is similar for men and women, although declines were somewhat more profound in men. These observations call for sustained efforts to finding the causes for this decline, as well as determining their validity in geographically and ethnically diverse populations.


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