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Interactive relationships of Type 2 diabetes and bipolar disorder with cognition: evidence of putative premature cognitive ageing in the UK Biobank Cohort

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posted on 2024-07-26, 14:55 authored by Elysha Ringin, David W. Dunstan, Roger S. McIntyre, Michael Berk, Neville OwenNeville Owen, Susan RossellSusan Rossell, Tamsyn Van RheenenTamsyn Van Rheenen
Type 2 diabetes (T2D) is disproportionately prevalent in bipolar disorder (BD) and is associated with cognitive deficits in psychiatrically healthy cohorts. Whether there is an interaction effect between T2D and BD on cognition remains unclear. Using the UK Biobank, we explored interactions between T2D, BD and cognition during mid and later life; and examined age-related cognitive performance effects in BD as a function of T2D. Data were available for 1511 participants with BD (85 T2D), and 81,162 psychiatrically healthy comparisons (HC) (3430 T2D). BD and T2D status were determined by validated measures created specifically for the UK Biobank. Diagnostic and age-related associations between T2D status and cognition were tested using analyses of covariance or logistic regression. There was a negative association of T2D with visuospatial memory that was specific to BD. Processing speed and prospective memory performance were negatively associated with T2D, irrespective of BD diagnosis. Cognitive deficits were evident in BD patients with T2D compared to those without, with scores either remaining the same (processing speed) or improving (visuospatial memory) as a function of participant age. In contrast, cognitive performance in BD patients without T2D was worse as participant age increased, although the age-related trajectory remained broadly equivalent to the HC group. BD and T2D associated with cognitive performance deficits across the mid-life period; indicating comorbid T2D as a potential risk factor for cognitive dysfunction in BD. In comparison to BD participants without T2D and HCs, age-independent cognitive impairments in BD participants with comorbid T2D suggest a potential premature deterioration of cognitive functioning compared to what would normally be expected.

Funding

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National Health and Medical Research Council

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PDF (Published version)

ISSN

1740-634X

Journal title

Neuropsychopharmacology

Volume

48

Issue

2

Pagination

8 pp

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Copyright statement

Copyright © 2022 the authors. This is the final peer-reviewed accepted manuscript version, hosted under the terms and conditions of the Attribution 4.0 International (CC BY 4.0) license. See http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.

Language

eng

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