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1.
J Alzheimers Dis ; 94(3): 879-898, 2023.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37355907

ABSTRACT

In older age, frailty is a detrimental transitional status of the aging process featuring an increased susceptibility to stressors defined by a clinical reduction of homoeostatic reserves. Multidimensional frailty phenotypes have been associated with all-cause dementia, mild cognitive impairment (MCI), Alzheimer's disease (AD), AD neuropathology, vascular dementia, and non-AD dementias. In the present article, we reviewed current evidence on the existing links among depressive and biopsychosocial frailty phenotypes and late-life cognitive disorders, also examining common pathways and mechanisms underlying these links. The depressive frailty phenotype suggested by the construct of late-life depression (LLD) plus physical frailty is poorly operationalized. The biopsychosocial frailty phenotype, with its coexistent biological/physical and psychosocial dimensions, defines a biological aging status and includes motivational, emotional, and socioeconomic domains. Shared biological pathways/substrates among depressive and biopsychosocial frailty phenotypes and late-life cognitive disorders are hypothesized to be inflammatory and cardiometabolic processes, together with multimorbidity, loneliness, mitochondrial dysfunction, dopaminergic neurotransmission, specific personality traits, lack of subjective/objective social support, and neuroendocrine dysregulation. The cognitive frailty phenotype, combining frailty and cognitive impairment, may be a risk factor for LLD and vice versa, and a construct of depressive frailty linking physical frailty and LLD may be a good dementia predictor. Frailty assessment may enable clinicians to better target the pharmacological and psychological treatment of LLD. Given the epidemiological links of biopsychosocial frailty with dementia and MCI, multidomain interventions might contribute to delay the onset of late-life cognitive disorders and other adverse health-related outcomes, such as institutionalization, more frequent hospitalization, disability, and mortality.


Subject(s)
Alzheimer Disease , Cognition Disorders , Cognitive Dysfunction , Frailty , Humans , Frailty/epidemiology , Frailty/psychology , Cognitive Dysfunction/epidemiology , Phenotype
2.
J Am Med Dir Assoc ; 24(5): 679-687, 2023 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36596468

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVES: Individuals with late-life depression (LLD) may have shorter survival, but there is a lack of findings in population-based settings about health-related outcomes of LLD and its subtypes: early-onset depression (EOD) and late-onset depression (LOD). We aimed to evaluate the risk of all-cause mortality of individuals with LLD and its subtypes in an older population-based cohort. Moreover, we investigated whether inflammatory, cognitive, genetic features and multimorbidity could modify the effect of this association. DESIGN: Longitudinal population-based study with 8-year follow-up. SETTING AND PARTICIPANTS: We analyzed data on a sample of 1479 participants, all aged >65 years, in the Salus in Apulia Study. METHODS: LLD was diagnosed through DSM-IV-TR criteria and LOD and EOD according to the age of onset. Multimorbidity status was defined as the copresence of 2 or more chronic diseases. RESULTS: The overall prevalence of LLD in this older sample from Southern Italy was 10.2%, subdivided into 3.4% EOD and 6.8% LOD. In multivariable Cox models adjusted for age, gender, education, global cognition, apolipoprotein E ε4 allele, physical frailty, interleukin-6, and multimorbidity, LLD showed a greater risk of all-cause mortality. LOD differed from EOD regarding gender, education, cognitive dysfunctions, and diabetes mellitus. There was a significantly increased risk of all-cause mortality for participants with LOD (hazard ratio:1.99; 95% CI 1.33-2.97) in the time of observation between enrollment date and death date (7.31 ± 2.17 months). CONCLUSIONS AND IMPLICATION: In older age, individuals with LOD but not with EOD had a significantly decreased survival, probably related to increased inflammation, multimorbidity, and cognitive impairments.


Subject(s)
Cognitive Dysfunction , Depression , Humans , Aged , Depression/epidemiology , Depression/psychology , Age of Onset , Follow-Up Studies , Cognition
3.
Geroscience ; 45(2): 663-706, 2023 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36242694

ABSTRACT

A well-preserved oral function is key to accomplishing essential daily tasks. However, in geriatric medicine and gerodontology, as age-related physiological decline disrupts several biological systems pathways, achieving this objective may pose a challenge. We aimed to make a systematic review of the existing literature on the relationships between poor oral health indicators contributing to the oral frailty phenotype, defined as an age-related gradual loss of oral function together with a decline in cognitive and physical functions, and a cluster of major adverse health-related outcomes in older age, including mortality, physical frailty, functional disability, quality of life, hospitalization, and falls. Six different electronic databases were consulted by two independent researchers, who found 68 eligible studies published from database inception to September 10, 2022. The risk of bias was evaluated using the National Institutes of Health Quality Assessment Toolkits for Observational Cohort and Cross-Sectional Studies. The study is registered on PROSPERO (CRD42021241075). Eleven different indicators of oral health were found to be related to adverse outcomes, which we grouped into four different categories: oral health status deterioration; decline in oral motor skills; chewing, swallowing, and saliva disorders; and oral pain. Oral health status deterioration, mostly number of teeth, was most frequently associated with all six adverse health-related outcomes, followed by chewing, swallowing, and saliva disorders associated with mortality, physical frailty, functional disability, hospitalization, and falls, then decline in oral motor skills associated with mortality, physical frailty, functional disability, hospitalization, and quality of life, and finally oral pain was associated only with physical frailty. The present findings could help to assess the contribution of each oral health indicator to the development of major adverse health-related outcomes in older age. These have important implications for prevention, given the potential reversibility of all these factors.


Subject(s)
Frailty , United States , Humans , Aged , Frailty/complications , Frail Elderly/psychology , Quality of Life , Cross-Sectional Studies , Geriatric Assessment
4.
J Affect Disord ; 319: 202-212, 2022 12 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36155237

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Possible relationships between suicidal ideation and biopsychosocial predictors in older age are unclear. In the population-based Salus in Apulia Study, we investigated the relationships among biomarkers, socio-demographic, psychopathological, inflammatory and metabolic characteristics and suicidal ideation in 1252 older subjects. METHODS: Suicidal ideation was evaluated with the brief version of the Columbia-Suicide Severity Rating Scale. Apolipoprotein E (APOE) genotype and inflammatory profile [interleukin (IL)-6, tumor necrosis factor (TNF)-α, C-reactive protein (CRP)] were evaluated. A machine learning algorithm, the Random Forest (RF), selected potential biopsychosocial factors associated to suicidal ideation. RESULTS: Suicidal ideators accounted for 2.32 % of subjects, were female, smokers, and obese with multimorbidity. After adjusting for age, gender, education and social dysfunction, logistic regression analyses revealed that suicidal ideation was associated to late-life depression (LLD) (odds ratio:21.71,95 % confidence interval:9.22-51.14). In the full RF model, asthma was the most important contributor to suicidal ideation. In the final RF model, education, age, and mild cognitive impairment followed by gender and global cognition were considered the most important contributors. Among biomarkers, in the final RF model, IL-6 followed by TNF-α, APOE ε4 allele presence, CRP and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol contributed most to suicidal ideation. LIMITATIONS: A relatively small number of older subjects with suicidal ideation (2.3 %); we did not distinguish between active and passive suicidal ideation. CONCLUSIONS: Although LLD is a strong determinant of suicidal ideation, other non-psychiatric factors, i.e., serum inflammation biomarkers, APOE ε4 allele, and multimorbidity, should be taken into account when evaluating a suicidal ideation phenotype in older age.


Subject(s)
Multimorbidity , Suicidal Ideation , Female , Male , Animals , Apolipoprotein E4/genetics , Phenotype , C-Reactive Protein , Genotype , Biomarkers , Risk Factors
5.
Expert Opin Investig Drugs ; 31(8): 759-771, 2022 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35758153

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: For Alzheimer's disease (AD) treatment, US FDA granted accelerated approval for aducanumab due to its amyloid-ß (Aß)-lowering effects, notwithstanding the reported poor correlation between amyloid plaque reduction and clinical change for this drug. The diversification of drug targets appears to be the future of the AD field and from this perspective, drugs modulating microglia dysfunction and combination treatment regimens offer some promise. AREAS COVERED: The aim of the present article was to provide a comprehensive review of ALZT-OP1 (cromolyn sodium plus ibuprofen), an experimental combination treatment regimen for AD, discussing their mechanisms of action targeting Aß and neuroinflammation, examining the role of microglia in AD and offering our own insights on the role of present and alternative approaches directed toward neuroinflammation. EXPERT OPINION: Enrolling high-risk participants with elevated brain amyloid could help to slow cognitive decline in secondary prevention trials during AD preclinical stages. Long-term follow-up indicated that non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs use begun when the brain was still normal may benefit these patients, suggesting that the timing of therapy could be crucial. However, previous clinical failures and the present incomplete understanding of the Aß pathophysiological role in AD put this novel experimental combination regimen at substantial risk of failure.


Subject(s)
Alzheimer Disease , Cognitive Dysfunction , Alzheimer Disease/drug therapy , Amyloid beta-Peptides/metabolism , Brain/metabolism , Humans , Plaque, Amyloid
6.
Epigenomics ; 14(2): 73-79, 2022 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34784757

ABSTRACT

Tweetable abstract There is growing evidence of a role of environmental exposures in the pathogenesis and epigenetics of suicidal behavior in older age.


Subject(s)
Suicidal Ideation , Suicide , Aged , Epigenesis, Genetic , Epigenomics , Humans , Risk Factors
7.
Neurosci Biobehav Rev ; 127: 193-211, 2021 08.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33878336

ABSTRACT

In older age, several observational studies investigated risk factors for suicide attempts/completed suicides; however, contrasting evidence came from population-based setting. In the present systematic review, we described through a narrative synthesis the significant associations existing among risk factors and suicide attempts/completed suicides in subjects aged >65 years. From the 39 population-based studies selected in six different databases until February 15, 2021, we analyzed the most frequent 28 risk factors for suicidal behaviour. The risk factors more associated to suicide attempts than other variables frequently related to suicidal behavior in older age were: depressive disorders, methods employed to self-harm (particularly poisoning), and psychotropic drug utilization followed by psychological factors and disability. Moreover, male sex, violent methods to self-harm, any psychiatric disorder (depression, anxiety and bipolar disorders), a poor medical condition, stressors/bereavement, and living alone appeared to be more significant for predicting completed suicides in late life. In older age, efforts for suicide prevention should be based on strategies to assess and treat psychiatric disorders along with psychological interventions, particularly in males.


Subject(s)
Bipolar Disorder , Suicide, Completed , Aged , Humans , Male , Risk Factors , Suicidal Ideation , Suicide, Attempted
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