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Epidemiologic Reviews Advance Access published online on September 8, 2008

Epidemiologic Reviews, doi:10.1093/epirev/mxn010
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Epidemiologic Reviews © The Author 2008. Published by the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org.

Article

Dementia Prevention: Methodological Explanations for Inconsistent Results

Nicola Coley1,2, Sandrine Andrieu1,2,3,4, Virginie Gardette1,2,3,4, Sophie Gillette-Guyonnet1,3,5, Caroline Sanz6, Bruno Vellas1,2,3,5 and Alain Grand1,2,3,4

1 INSERM Unit 558, Toulouse, France
2 University of Toulouse III, Toulouse, France
3 Gerontopole, Toulouse University Hospital, Toulouse, France
4 Department of Epidemiology and Public Health, Toulouse University Hospital, Toulouse, France
5 Department of Geriatric Medicine, Toulouse University Hospital, Toulouse, France
6 Department of Diabetology and Metabolic Diseases, Toulouse University Hospital, Toulouse, France

Correspondence to Nicola Coley, INSERM Unit 558, Faculté de médicine, 37 allées Jules Guesde, 31073 Toulouse, France (e-mail: coley{at}cict.fr).

accepted for publication May 29, 2008.

The prevention of neurodegenerative dementias, such as Alzheimer disease, is a growing public health concern, because of a lack of effective curative treatment options and a rising global prevalence. Various potential risk or preventive factors have been suggested by epidemiologic research, including modifiable lifestyle factors, such as social contacts, leisure activities, physical exercise, and diet, as well as some preventive pharmacologic strategies, such as hormone replacement therapy, nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drugs, and Ginkgo biloba. Some factors have been targeted by interventions tested in randomized controlled trials, but many of the results are in conflict with observational evidence. The aim of this paper is to review the epidemiologic data linking potential protective factors to dementia or cognitive decline and to discuss the methodological limitations that could explain conflicting results. A thorough review of the literature suggests that, even if there are consistent findings from large observational studies regarding preventive or risk factors for dementia, few randomized controlled trials have been designed specifically to prove the protective effects of interventions based on such factors on dementia incidence. Because of the multifactorial origin of dementia, it appears that multidomain interventions could be a suitable candidate for preventive interventions, but designing such trials remains very challenging for researchers.

Alzheimer disease • bias (epidemiology) • cognition disorders • dementia • epidemiologic research design • primary prevention • randomized controlled trials as topic • risk factors


APOE, apolipoprotein E • NSAID, nonsteroidal antiinflammatory drug • WHIMS, Women's Health Initiative Memory Study • WHISCA, Women's Health Initiative Study of Cognitive Aging • WHS, Women's Health Study


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