General cognitive ability in high school, attained education, occupational complexity, and dementia risk

Alzheimers Dement. 2024 Apr;20(4):2662-2669. doi: 10.1002/alz.13739. Epub 2024 Feb 20.

Abstract

Introduction: We address the extent to which adolescent cognition predicts dementia risk in later life, mediated by educational attainment and occupational complexity.

Methods: Using data from Project Talent Aging Study (PTAS), we fitted two structural equation models to test whether adolescent cognition predicts cognitive impairment (CI) and Ascertain Dementia 8 (AD8) status simultaneously (NCognitive Assessment = 2477) and AD8 alone (NQuestionnaire = 6491) 60 years later, mediated by education and occupational complexity. Co-twin control analysis examined 82 discordant pairs for CI/AD8.

Results: Education partially mediated the effect of adolescent cognition on CI in the cognitive assessment aample and AD8 in the questionnaire sample (Ps < 0.001). Within twin pairs, differences in adolescent cognition were small, but intrapair differences in education predicted CI status.

Discussion: Adolescent cognition predicted dementia risk 60 years later, partially mediated through education. Educational attainment, but not occupational complexity, contributes to CI risk beyond its role as a mediator of adolescent cognition, further supported by the co-twin analyses.

Highlights: Project Talent Aging Study follows enrollees from high school for nearly 60 years. General cognitive ability in high school predicts later-life cognitive impairment. Low education is a risk partially due to its association with cognitive ability.

Keywords: attained education; dementia risk factors; general cognitive ability; project talent.

Publication types

  • Twin Study

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Cognition
  • Cognitive Dysfunction* / epidemiology
  • Dementia* / epidemiology
  • Educational Status
  • Humans
  • Schools