Educational attainment and cognitive decline in old age

Background: Level of education is a well-established risk factor for Alzheimer disease but its relation to cognitive decline, the principal clinical manifestation of the disease, is uncertain. Methods: More than 6,000 older residents of a community on the south side of Chicago were interviewed at approximately 3-year intervals for up to 14 years. The interview included administration of four brief tests of cognitive function from which a previously established composite measure of global cognition was derived. We estimated the associations of education with baseline level of cognition and rate of cognitive change in a series of mixed-effects models. Results: In an initial analysis, higher level of education was related to higher level of cognition at baseline, but there was no linear association between education and rate of change in cognitive function. In a subsequent analysis with terms to allow for nonlinearity in education and its relation to cognitive decline, rate of cognitive decline at average or high levels of education was slightly increased during earlier years of follow-up but slightly decreased in later years in comparison to low levels of education. Findings were similar among black and white participants. Cognitive performance improved with repeated test administration, but there was no evidence that retest effects were related to education or attenuated education’s association with cognitive change. Conclusions: The results suggest that education is robustly associated with level of cognitive function but not with rate of cognitive decline and that the former association primarily accounts for education’s correlation with risk of dementia in old age.

[1]  G. Belle,et al.  Education modifies the effect of apolipoprotein epsilon 4 on cognitive decline , 2005, Neurobiology of Aging.

[2]  B. Takkouche,et al.  Education and Dementia: A Meta-Analytic Study , 2006, Neuroepidemiology.

[3]  M Salive,et al.  Association of education with incidence of cognitive impairment in three established populations for epidemiologic studies of the elderly. , 1994, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[4]  F. Grodstein,et al.  Education, other socioeconomic indicators, and cognitive function. , 2003, American journal of epidemiology.

[5]  R. Mayeux,et al.  Influence of education and occupation on the incidence of Alzheimer's disease. , 1994, JAMA.

[6]  D. Bennett,et al.  Depressive symptoms and cognitive decline in a community population of older persons. , 2004, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[7]  Eileen Crimmins,et al.  Education and Cognitive Decline in Older Americans , 2007, Research on aging.

[8]  Kaarin J Anstey,et al.  A latent growth curve analysis of late-life sensory and cognitive function over 8 years: evidence for specific and common factors underlying change. , 2003, Psychology and aging.

[9]  J. Lindeboom,et al.  Low education is a genuine risk factor for accelerated memory decline and dementia. , 1997, Journal of clinical epidemiology.

[10]  K. Hall,et al.  Relationship of age, education, and occupation with dementia among a community-based sample of African Americans. , 1996, Archives of neurology.

[11]  R. B. Lipton,et al.  Education delays accelerated decline on a memory test in persons who develop dementia , 2007, Neurology.

[12]  D. Bennett,et al.  Cognitive activity in older persons from a geographically defined population. , 1999, The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences.

[13]  Laura Fratiglioni,et al.  Relation of education and occupation-based socioeconomic status to incident Alzheimer's disease. , 2004, American journal of epidemiology.

[14]  N. Cook,et al.  The Relation of Education and Income to Cognitive Function among Professional Women , 2006, Neuroepidemiology.

[15]  D. Bennett,et al.  Distress proneness and cognitive decline in a population of older persons , 2005, Psychoneuroendocrinology.

[16]  J. Schneider,et al.  Individual differences in rates of change in cognitive abilities of older persons. , 2002, Psychology and aging.

[17]  J. Bartko,et al.  Education and change in cognitive function. The Epidemiologic Catchment Area Study. , 1995, Annals of epidemiology.

[18]  Yan Li,et al.  Cognitive decline in old age: separating retest effects from the effects of growing older. , 2006, Psychology and aging.

[19]  A. Mackinnon,et al.  Age is no kinder to the better educated: absence of an association investigated using latent growth techniques in a community sample , 2001, Psychological Medicine.

[20]  R B Wallace,et al.  Longitudinal application of cognitive function measures in a defined population of community-dwelling elders. , 1991, Annals of epidemiology.

[21]  M. Albert,et al.  Predictors of cognitive change in older persons: MacArthur studies of successful aging. , 1995, Psychology and aging.

[22]  H. Jacqmin-Gadda,et al.  Longitudinal analysis of the effect of apolipoprotein E ε4 and education on cognitive performance in elderly subjects: the PAQUID study , 2002, Journal of neurology, neurosurgery, and psychiatry.

[23]  J. Cauley,et al.  Bone Loss Predicts Subsequent Cognitive Decline in Older Women: The Study of Osteoporotic Fractures , 2003, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[24]  J. Jolles,et al.  No protective effects of education during normal cognitive aging: results from the 6-year follow-up of the Maastricht Aging Study. , 2008, Psychology and aging.

[25]  E. Brunner Social and biological determinants of cognitive aging , 2005, Neurobiology of Aging.

[26]  C. Lyketsos,et al.  Cognitive decline in adulthood: an 11.5-year follow-up of the Baltimore Epidemiologic Catchment Area study. , 1999, The American journal of psychiatry.

[27]  H. Sugisawa,et al.  Transitions in cognitive status among the aged in Japan. , 1996, Social science & medicine.

[28]  L A Beckett,et al.  Education and other measures of socioeconomic status and risk of incident Alzheimer disease in a defined population of older persons. , 1997, Archives of neurology.

[29]  S. Rubin,et al.  Socioeconomic differences in cognitive decline and the role of biomedical factors. , 2005, Annals of epidemiology.

[30]  D. Snowdon,et al.  Age, Education, and Changes in the Mini‐Mental State Exam Scores of Older Women: Findings from the Nun Study , 1996, Journal of the American Geriatrics Society.

[31]  M. Albert,et al.  Level of education and change in cognitive function in a community population of older persons. , 1993, Annals of epidemiology.

[32]  H. Christensen,et al.  EDUCATION AND DECLINE IN COGNITIVE PERFORMANCE: COMPENSATORY BUT NOT PROTECTIVE , 1997, International journal of geriatric psychiatry.

[33]  R S Wilson,et al.  Education and the course of cognitive decline in Alzheimer disease , 2004, Neurology.

[34]  François Béland,et al.  Cognitive decline is related to education and occupation in a Spanish elderly cohort , 2002, Aging clinical and experimental research.

[35]  D Commenges,et al.  A 5-year longitudinal study of the Mini-Mental State Examination in normal aging. , 1997, American journal of epidemiology.

[36]  R. Dixon,et al.  Use it or lose it: engaged lifestyle as a buffer of cognitive decline in aging? , 1999, Psychology and aging.

[37]  T. Arbuckle,et al.  Individual differences in trajectory of intellectual development over 45 years of adulthood. , 1998, Psychology and aging.

[38]  D. Featherman,et al.  On the Measurement of Occupation in Social Surveys , 1973 .

[39]  Y. Stern,et al.  Education and rates of cognitive decline in incident Alzheimer’s disease , 2005, Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery & Psychiatry.

[40]  Eileen Crimmins,et al.  Education and APOE-e4 in longitudinal cognitive decline: MacArthur Studies of Successful Aging. , 2005, The journals of gerontology. Series B, Psychological sciences and social sciences.

[41]  M C Morris,et al.  Methodological issues in the study of cognitive decline. , 1999, American journal of epidemiology.