4.6 Article

Glaucoma and cognitive function trajectories in a population-based study: Findings from the health and retirement study

Journal

JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN GERIATRICS SOCIETY
Volume 70, Issue 10, Pages 2827-2837

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jgs.17903

Keywords

aging; cognitive function; glaucoma; ophthalmology; vision

Funding

  1. National Institutes of Health [K23EY027848]
  2. National Institute on Aging [U01 AG009741, R01 AG053972]
  3. Social Security Administration

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This study investigated the association between glaucoma and cognitive function using a large sample size, longitudinal follow-up, and repeated measures of cognitive function. The results showed a small and clinically insignificant association between glaucoma and cognitive function.
Introduction Prior studies on the association of glaucoma and cognitive function have reported mixed results. Methods The Health and Retirement Study (HRS) is a nationally representative panel survey of Americans age >= 51 years. HRS-linked Medicare claims data were used to identify incident glaucoma cases (by glaucoma type). Cognitive function was measured using the Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status (TICS), administered in each wave (every 2 years). Separate linear mixed models were fitted with either prevalent or incident glaucoma as a predictor of TICS trajectories and adjusting for age, race/ethnicity, educational attainment, gender, and medical history. Negative model estimates indicate associations of glaucoma with worse cognitive function scores or steeper per-year declines in cognitive function scores. Results Analyses of prevalent glaucoma cases included 1344 cases and 5729 controls. Analyses of incident glaucoma included 886 cases and 4385 controls. In fully-adjusted models, those with prevalent glaucoma had similar TICS scores to controls (beta = 0.01; 95% Confidence Interval [CI]: -0.15, 0.18; p = 0.86). However, in those with incident glaucoma, we detected a statistically significant association between glaucoma and lower TICS scores (beta = -0.29; 95% CI: -0.50, -0.08; p = 0.007). However, there was no statistically significant association between either prevalent or incident glaucoma and per-year rates of change in TICS scores. When categorizing glaucoma by type (primary open angle glaucoma, normal tension glaucoma, or other glaucoma), no significant associations were detected between either prevalent or incident glaucoma and levels of or rates of change in TICS scores in fully covariate adjusted models. Conclusion The observed associations between glaucoma and cognitive function were small and unlikely to be clinically meaningful. Compared to prior studies on this topic, this investigation provides robust evidence based on its larger sample size, longitudinal follow-up, and repeated measures of cognitive function in a population-based sample.

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