4.5 Article

Education and Literacy as Risk Factors of Dementia after Stroke and Transient Ischemic Attack: NEDICES Study

Journal

JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE
Volume 88, Issue 1, Pages 291-299

Publisher

IOS PRESS
DOI: 10.3233/JAD-220109

Keywords

Cognitive reserve; illiteracy; low education; stroke; transient ischemic attack

Categories

Funding

  1. World Health Organization Age-Associated Dementia Project (WHO-AAD)
  2. EPICARDIAN study [PB1225-C04]
  3. Spanish Research Agencies [FIS 93/0773, 96/1993, 00-0011-01, CAM 94/0032]
  4. Spanish Office of Science and Technology [PB 1225-C04]
  5. Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII
  6. Spanish Biomedical Research Institute) [JR 18/00046]
  7. Spanish Ministry of Science [BEAGAL18/00006]
  8. University of Cordoba (Spain)
  9. Spanish Ministry of Education

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This study investigates the impact of education and literacy on dementia incidence in stroke and TIA patients. The results show that low education and literacy are significantly associated with a higher risk of dementia. Furthermore, low/null literacy has a different effect on dementia risk compared to education.
Background: A protective effect of education on cognitive decline after stroke has been claimed, but evidence from prospective population-based cohorts is very limited. The differential role of literacy and education on dementia after stroke remains unexplored. Objective: This research addresses the role of education and literacy in dementia incidence after stroke and transient ischemic attack (TIA). Methods: 131 participants with stroke or TIA were identified within the population-based NEDICES study (N= 5,278 persons). Participants were fully assessed at baseline (1994-1995) and incident dementia diagnosis was made by expert neurologists (DSM-IV criteria) after a mean follow-up of 3.4 years. Adjusted Cox regression analyses were applied to test the association between education, literacy, and dementia risk. Results: Within the 131 subjects with stroke or TIA, 19 (14%) developed dementia at follow-up. The Cox's regression model (age and sex adjusted) showed that low education (HR = 3.48, 95% CI = 1.28, 9.42, p = 0.014) and literacy (HR = 3.16, 95% CI = 1.08, 9.22, p = 0.035) were significantly associated with a higher dementia risk. Low education was also associated with dementia when main confounders (i.e., cognitive/functional performance) were considered in the Cox's model. However, after including stroke recurrence, only low/null literacy (versus education) remained as significant predictor of dementia. Finally, low/null literacy showed an effect over-and-above education on dementia risk when both factors were introduced in the adjusted Cox's regression. Conclusion: These findings underline the importance of literacy to estimate cognitive decline after stroke in low-educated populations.

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