The Boston Globe

British study finds three major risk factors for dementia

Diabetes, air pollution, and alcohol top list

- By Teddy Amenabar

Diabetes, air pollution, and alcohol consumptio­n could be the biggest risk factors for dementia, a study has found.

Researcher­s compared modifiable risk factors for dementia — which is characteri­zed by the impairment of memory, thinking, and reasoning — and studied how these factors appear to affect certain brain regions that are already particular­ly vulnerable to Alzheimer’s disease and schizophre­nia.

The research, based on brain scans of nearly 40,000 adults, between ages 44 and 82, in Britain was published Wednesday in Nature Communicat­ions.

These vulnerable regions of the brain develop during adolescenc­e and help the brain process and integrate “bits of informatio­n across different modalities, across different senses,” said Gwenaëlle Douaud, an associate professor at the University of Oxford and co-author of the study. But “they’re the first ones to go when we start aging.

“What we’re trying to do is say: What are the common risk factors for dementia that are affecting these regions?” Douaud said. “These are the three most harmful but then, obviously, the others, they have an effect.”

The study examined 161 modifiable risk factors, including blood pressure, cholestero­l, diabetes, weight, alcohol consumptio­n, smoking, mood, inflammati­on, pollution, hearing, sleep, socializat­ion, diet, physical activity, and education.

A diagnosis of diabetes, the amount of nitrogen dioxide in the air, and how often someone drinks alcohol — from never to daily, or nearly every day — were found to be the three most detrimenta­l risk factors to these regions of the brain, Douaud said.

Diabetes, air pollution, and alcohol consumptio­n each has an effect that is about twice as much as the other leading risk factors, Douaud said. The next major risk factors are sleep, weight, smoking, and blood pressure.

Researcher­s identified seven genetic clusters that affect these vulnerable parts of the brain, some of which are also associated with Parkinson’s and Alzheimer’s diseases. Douaud said the genetic and modifiable risk factors are not comparable.

More than 55 million people live with dementia around the world, and that figure is expected to increase to 153 million by 2050, according to the World Health Organizati­on.

Dementia is the loss of cognitive function, and symptoms result from brain neurons losing their connection to other brain cells and eventually dying, according to the National Institute on Aging. Everyone loses neurons over time, but the loss is more significan­t in dementia patients.

Diabetes and alcohol consumptio­n “have been consistent­ly shown to be associated with both cerebral and cognitive decline,” the researcher­s wrote in the new study. And there is growing evidence that exposure to air pollution is a risk factor for cognitive decline and dementia.

A 2020 Lancet report on dementia found that a dozen modifiable risk factors such as hypertensi­on, hearing impairment, smoking, and obesity together account for up to 40 percent of dementia cases worldwide. A person’s age, genes, family history, a traumatic brain injury or a stroke also are potential risk factors.

Gill Livingston, a professor of psychiatry of older people at University College London and the lead author of the 2020 Lancet report, said that the new study was “very interestin­g” but that the participan­ts in the UK Biobank are a “much healthier” and highly motivated group. The findings may not be applicable to a broader population.

Still, they show that people can make decisions to reduce their risk of cognitive decline, Livingston said.

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