4.5 Article

Gender differences in cognitive reserve: implication for subjective cognitive decline in women

Journal

NEUROLOGICAL SCIENCES
Volume 43, Issue 4, Pages 2499-2508

Publisher

SPRINGER-VERLAG ITALIA SRL
DOI: 10.1007/s10072-021-05644-x

Keywords

Subjective cognitive decline; Cognitive reserve; Sex; Gender differences

Funding

  1. Tuscany Region [20RSVB-PREVIEW]

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The study found that women with SCD were younger and had less education, lower intelligence test scores, and more cognitive complaints compared to men. Intelligence tests were directly related to age of onset for both genders, while years of education were only inversely related to age of onset in women. Gender independently affected intelligence tests, with intelligence tests being directly related to cognitive complaints in men.
Background Subjective Cognitive Decline (SCD) is a self-experienced decline in cognitive capacity with normal performance on standardized cognitive tests, showing to increase risk of Alzheimer's Disease (AD). Cognitive reserve seems to influence the progression from SCD to Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) and to AD. The aim of our study was to investigate gender differences in cognitive reserve evaluating how sex might modulate the role of cognitive reserve on SCD. Methods We included 381 SCD patients who underwent clinical evaluation, neuropsychological assessment, evaluation of premorbid intelligence by the Test di Intelligenza Breve (TIB), cognitive complaints by the Memory Assessment Clinics Questionnaire (MAC-Q), and apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotyping. Results The proportion between women and men was significantly different (68.7% [95% CI 63.9-73.4 vs 31.4%, 95% CI 26.6-36.0]). Women were younger than men at onset of SCD and at the baseline visit (p = 0.021), had lower years of education (p = 0.007), lower TIB scores (p < 0.001), and higher MAC-Q scores (p = 0.012). TIB was directly associated with age at onset of SCD in both women and men, while years of education was inversely associated with age at onset only in women. Multivariate analysis showed that sex influences TIB independently from years of education. TIB was directly associated with MAC-Q in men. Conclusions Sex interacts with premorbid intelligence and education level in influencing the age at onset and the severity of SCD. As the effect of education was different between men and women, we speculated that education might act as a minor contributor of cognitive reserve in women.

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