AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates the link between cognitive ability in young adulthood and benzodiazepine use later in life, as well as its impact on cognitive decline in middle age.
  • Analysis of data from over 335,000 men shows that lower cognitive scores at age 19 correlate with a higher likelihood of benzodiazepine use and greater cognitive decline for those who used the medication regularly.
  • Findings suggest that while lower cognitive ability increases benzodiazepine usage, the resulting cognitive decline from high usage is statistically significant but may not be clinically important.

Article Abstract

Background: It remains uncertain whether long-term use of benzodiazepines is associated with age-related cognitive decline, and if cognitive ability in early life is the driver of any association. This study examines the association of cognitive ability in young adulthood with later use of benzodiazepines and explores whether the use of benzodiazepines during adult life is associated with cognitive decline in late midlife.

Methods: The study samples include cognitive tests on the Børge Priens Prøve (BPP) from the conscription board examination (age 19 years) from 335 513 men born 1949-1961 and data from re-examinations of 5183 men 44 years later. Cognitive decline was defined as the difference between scores at the conscription board and the re-examination. Information on purchases of benzodiazepines was obtained from the Danish National Prescription Registry, 1995-2022. Associations were analysed using Cox proportional hazards and linear regression.

Results: In total, 120 911 (36%) men purchased benzodiazepines during a follow-up of 20 years. Lower cognitive scores in young adulthood were associated with a higher risk of initiating benzodiazepines (hazard ratio [95% CI] = 0.71[0.68-0.75]). Men with the highest cumulative use of benzodiazepines had larger cognitive decline (-coefficient [95% CI] = -1.66 [-2.09 to -1.23] BPP scores) compared with never users. Current benzodiazepine users showed a larger cognitive decline than never users (-coefficient [95% CI] = -2.42[-3.18 to -1.66] BPP scores) and this partially explained the above association. These estimates for cognitive decline were relatively small and may lack clinical relevance.

Conclusion: Low cognitive ability increases the risk of benzodiazepine use in adulthood and cognitive decline is more pronounced in those with the highest benzodiazepine use compared with never-use, but the difference lacks clinical significance.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11536101PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S0033291724002046DOI Listing

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