Cargando…

Associations between blood pressure across adulthood and late-life brain structure and pathology in the neuroscience substudy of the 1946 British birth cohort (Insight 46): an epidemiological study

BACKGROUND: Midlife hypertension confers increased risk for cognitive impairment in late life. The sensitive period for risk exposure and extent that risk is mediated through amyloid or vascular-related mechanisms are poorly understood. We aimed to identify if, and when, blood pressure or change in...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lane, Christopher A, Barnes, Josephine, Nicholas, Jennifer M, Sudre, Carole H, Cash, David M, Parker, Thomas D, Malone, Ian B, Lu, Kirsty, James, Sarah-Naomi, Keshavan, Ashvini, Murray-Smith, Heidi, Wong, Andrew, Buchanan, Sarah M, Keuss, Sarah E, Gordon, Elizabeth, Coath, William, Barnes, Anna, Dickson, John, Modat, Marc, Thomas, David, Crutch, Sebastian J, Hardy, Rebecca, Richards, Marcus, Fox, Nick C, Schott, Jonathan M
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Lancet Pub. Group 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6744368/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31444142
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1474-4422(19)30228-5
_version_ 1783451354360971264
author Lane, Christopher A
Barnes, Josephine
Nicholas, Jennifer M
Sudre, Carole H
Cash, David M
Parker, Thomas D
Malone, Ian B
Lu, Kirsty
James, Sarah-Naomi
Keshavan, Ashvini
Murray-Smith, Heidi
Wong, Andrew
Buchanan, Sarah M
Keuss, Sarah E
Gordon, Elizabeth
Coath, William
Barnes, Anna
Dickson, John
Modat, Marc
Thomas, David
Crutch, Sebastian J
Hardy, Rebecca
Richards, Marcus
Fox, Nick C
Schott, Jonathan M
author_facet Lane, Christopher A
Barnes, Josephine
Nicholas, Jennifer M
Sudre, Carole H
Cash, David M
Parker, Thomas D
Malone, Ian B
Lu, Kirsty
James, Sarah-Naomi
Keshavan, Ashvini
Murray-Smith, Heidi
Wong, Andrew
Buchanan, Sarah M
Keuss, Sarah E
Gordon, Elizabeth
Coath, William
Barnes, Anna
Dickson, John
Modat, Marc
Thomas, David
Crutch, Sebastian J
Hardy, Rebecca
Richards, Marcus
Fox, Nick C
Schott, Jonathan M
author_sort Lane, Christopher A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Midlife hypertension confers increased risk for cognitive impairment in late life. The sensitive period for risk exposure and extent that risk is mediated through amyloid or vascular-related mechanisms are poorly understood. We aimed to identify if, and when, blood pressure or change in blood pressure during adulthood were associated with late-life brain structure, pathology, and cognition. METHODS: Participants were from Insight 46, a neuroscience substudy of the ongoing longitudinal Medical Research Council National Survey of Health and Development, a birth cohort that initially comprised 5362 individuals born throughout mainland Britain in one week in 1946. Participants aged 69–71 years received T1 and FLAIR volumetric MRI, florbetapir amyloid-PET imaging, and cognitive assessment at University College London (London, UK); all participants were dementia-free. Blood pressure measurements had been collected at ages 36, 43, 53, 60–64, and 69 years. We also calculated blood pressure change variables between ages. Primary outcome measures were white matter hyperintensity volume (WMHV) quantified from multimodal MRI using an automated method, amyloid-β positivity or negativity using a standardised uptake value ratio approach, whole-brain and hippocampal volumes quantified from 3D-T1 MRI, and a composite cognitive score—the Preclinical Alzheimer Cognitive Composite (PACC). We investigated associations between blood pressure and blood pressure changes at and between 36, 43, 53, 60–64, and 69 years of age with WMHV using generalised linear models with a gamma distribution and log link function, amyloid-β status using logistic regression, whole-brain volume and hippocampal volumes using linear regression, and PACC score using linear regression, with adjustment for potential confounders. FINDINGS: Between May 28, 2015, and Jan 10, 2018, 502 individuals were assessed as part of Insight 46. 465 participants (238 [51%] men; mean age 70·7 years [SD 0·7]; 83 [18%] amyloid-β-positive) were included in imaging analyses. Higher systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) at age 53 years and greater increases in SBP and DBP between 43 and 53 years were positively associated with WMHV at 69–71 years of age (increase in mean WMHV per 10 mm Hg greater SBP 7%, 95% CI 1–14, p=0·024; increase in mean WMHV per 10 mm Hg greater DBP 15%, 4–27, p=0·0057; increase in mean WMHV per one SD change in SBP 15%, 3–29, p=0·012; increase in mean WMHV per 1 SD change in DBP 15%, 3–30, p=0·017). Higher DBP at 43 years of age was associated with smaller whole-brain volume at 69–71 years of age (−6·9 mL per 10 mm Hg greater DBP, −11·9 to −1·9, p=0·0068), as were greater increases in DBP between 36 and 43 years of age (−6·5 mL per 1 SD change, −11·1 to −1·9, p=0·0054). Greater increases in SBP between 36 and 43 years of age were associated with smaller hippocampal volumes at 69–71 years of age (−0·03 mL per 1 SD change, −0·06 to −0·001, p=0·043). Neither absolute blood pressure nor change in blood pressure predicted amyloid-β status or PACC score at 69–71 years of age. INTERPRETATION: High and increasing blood pressure from early adulthood into midlife seems to be associated with increased WMHV and smaller brain volumes at 69–71 years of age. We found no evidence that blood pressure affected cognition or cerebral amyloid-β load at this age. Blood pressure monitoring and interventions might need to start around 40 years of age to maximise late-life brain health. FUNDING: Alzheimer's Research UK, Medical Research Council, Dementias Platform UK, Wellcome Trust, Brain Research UK, Wolfson Foundation, Weston Brain Institute, Avid Radiopharmaceuticals.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6744368
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2019
publisher Lancet Pub. Group
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-67443682019-10-01 Associations between blood pressure across adulthood and late-life brain structure and pathology in the neuroscience substudy of the 1946 British birth cohort (Insight 46): an epidemiological study Lane, Christopher A Barnes, Josephine Nicholas, Jennifer M Sudre, Carole H Cash, David M Parker, Thomas D Malone, Ian B Lu, Kirsty James, Sarah-Naomi Keshavan, Ashvini Murray-Smith, Heidi Wong, Andrew Buchanan, Sarah M Keuss, Sarah E Gordon, Elizabeth Coath, William Barnes, Anna Dickson, John Modat, Marc Thomas, David Crutch, Sebastian J Hardy, Rebecca Richards, Marcus Fox, Nick C Schott, Jonathan M Lancet Neurol Article BACKGROUND: Midlife hypertension confers increased risk for cognitive impairment in late life. The sensitive period for risk exposure and extent that risk is mediated through amyloid or vascular-related mechanisms are poorly understood. We aimed to identify if, and when, blood pressure or change in blood pressure during adulthood were associated with late-life brain structure, pathology, and cognition. METHODS: Participants were from Insight 46, a neuroscience substudy of the ongoing longitudinal Medical Research Council National Survey of Health and Development, a birth cohort that initially comprised 5362 individuals born throughout mainland Britain in one week in 1946. Participants aged 69–71 years received T1 and FLAIR volumetric MRI, florbetapir amyloid-PET imaging, and cognitive assessment at University College London (London, UK); all participants were dementia-free. Blood pressure measurements had been collected at ages 36, 43, 53, 60–64, and 69 years. We also calculated blood pressure change variables between ages. Primary outcome measures were white matter hyperintensity volume (WMHV) quantified from multimodal MRI using an automated method, amyloid-β positivity or negativity using a standardised uptake value ratio approach, whole-brain and hippocampal volumes quantified from 3D-T1 MRI, and a composite cognitive score—the Preclinical Alzheimer Cognitive Composite (PACC). We investigated associations between blood pressure and blood pressure changes at and between 36, 43, 53, 60–64, and 69 years of age with WMHV using generalised linear models with a gamma distribution and log link function, amyloid-β status using logistic regression, whole-brain volume and hippocampal volumes using linear regression, and PACC score using linear regression, with adjustment for potential confounders. FINDINGS: Between May 28, 2015, and Jan 10, 2018, 502 individuals were assessed as part of Insight 46. 465 participants (238 [51%] men; mean age 70·7 years [SD 0·7]; 83 [18%] amyloid-β-positive) were included in imaging analyses. Higher systolic blood pressure (SBP) and diastolic blood pressure (DBP) at age 53 years and greater increases in SBP and DBP between 43 and 53 years were positively associated with WMHV at 69–71 years of age (increase in mean WMHV per 10 mm Hg greater SBP 7%, 95% CI 1–14, p=0·024; increase in mean WMHV per 10 mm Hg greater DBP 15%, 4–27, p=0·0057; increase in mean WMHV per one SD change in SBP 15%, 3–29, p=0·012; increase in mean WMHV per 1 SD change in DBP 15%, 3–30, p=0·017). Higher DBP at 43 years of age was associated with smaller whole-brain volume at 69–71 years of age (−6·9 mL per 10 mm Hg greater DBP, −11·9 to −1·9, p=0·0068), as were greater increases in DBP between 36 and 43 years of age (−6·5 mL per 1 SD change, −11·1 to −1·9, p=0·0054). Greater increases in SBP between 36 and 43 years of age were associated with smaller hippocampal volumes at 69–71 years of age (−0·03 mL per 1 SD change, −0·06 to −0·001, p=0·043). Neither absolute blood pressure nor change in blood pressure predicted amyloid-β status or PACC score at 69–71 years of age. INTERPRETATION: High and increasing blood pressure from early adulthood into midlife seems to be associated with increased WMHV and smaller brain volumes at 69–71 years of age. We found no evidence that blood pressure affected cognition or cerebral amyloid-β load at this age. Blood pressure monitoring and interventions might need to start around 40 years of age to maximise late-life brain health. FUNDING: Alzheimer's Research UK, Medical Research Council, Dementias Platform UK, Wellcome Trust, Brain Research UK, Wolfson Foundation, Weston Brain Institute, Avid Radiopharmaceuticals. Lancet Pub. Group 2019-10 /pmc/articles/PMC6744368/ /pubmed/31444142 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1474-4422(19)30228-5 Text en © 2019 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd. This is an Open Access article under the CC BY 4.0 license http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Lane, Christopher A
Barnes, Josephine
Nicholas, Jennifer M
Sudre, Carole H
Cash, David M
Parker, Thomas D
Malone, Ian B
Lu, Kirsty
James, Sarah-Naomi
Keshavan, Ashvini
Murray-Smith, Heidi
Wong, Andrew
Buchanan, Sarah M
Keuss, Sarah E
Gordon, Elizabeth
Coath, William
Barnes, Anna
Dickson, John
Modat, Marc
Thomas, David
Crutch, Sebastian J
Hardy, Rebecca
Richards, Marcus
Fox, Nick C
Schott, Jonathan M
Associations between blood pressure across adulthood and late-life brain structure and pathology in the neuroscience substudy of the 1946 British birth cohort (Insight 46): an epidemiological study
title Associations between blood pressure across adulthood and late-life brain structure and pathology in the neuroscience substudy of the 1946 British birth cohort (Insight 46): an epidemiological study
title_full Associations between blood pressure across adulthood and late-life brain structure and pathology in the neuroscience substudy of the 1946 British birth cohort (Insight 46): an epidemiological study
title_fullStr Associations between blood pressure across adulthood and late-life brain structure and pathology in the neuroscience substudy of the 1946 British birth cohort (Insight 46): an epidemiological study
title_full_unstemmed Associations between blood pressure across adulthood and late-life brain structure and pathology in the neuroscience substudy of the 1946 British birth cohort (Insight 46): an epidemiological study
title_short Associations between blood pressure across adulthood and late-life brain structure and pathology in the neuroscience substudy of the 1946 British birth cohort (Insight 46): an epidemiological study
title_sort associations between blood pressure across adulthood and late-life brain structure and pathology in the neuroscience substudy of the 1946 british birth cohort (insight 46): an epidemiological study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6744368/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31444142
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S1474-4422(19)30228-5
work_keys_str_mv AT lanechristophera associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT barnesjosephine associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT nicholasjenniferm associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT sudrecaroleh associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT cashdavidm associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT parkerthomasd associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT maloneianb associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT lukirsty associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT jamessarahnaomi associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT keshavanashvini associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT murraysmithheidi associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT wongandrew associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT buchanansarahm associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT keusssarahe associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT gordonelizabeth associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT coathwilliam associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT barnesanna associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT dicksonjohn associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT modatmarc associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT thomasdavid associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT crutchsebastianj associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT hardyrebecca associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT richardsmarcus associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT foxnickc associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy
AT schottjonathanm associationsbetweenbloodpressureacrossadulthoodandlatelifebrainstructureandpathologyintheneurosciencesubstudyofthe1946britishbirthcohortinsight46anepidemiologicalstudy