A third of dementia cases could be prevented by making environmental
and life-style changes starting in childhood, scientists have claimed.
The
panel of 24 international experts identified a range of modifiable risk
factors they believe to be responsible for around 35% of all instances
of dementia, including Alzheimer’s.
Different risk factors were said to make an impact at different stages in life, having an accumulating effect.
Better
education in early life and addressing hearing loss, high blood
pressure and obesity in mid-life could reduce the incidence of dementia
by up to 20%, the research suggests.
In
later life, stopping smoking, treating depression, increasing physical
activity, managing diabetes and enhancing social contact could reduce
dementia rates a further 15%, according to the findings.
Professor
Lon Schneider, a member of the team from the University of Southern
California in the US, said: “There’s been a great deal of focus on
developing medicines to prevent dementia, including Alzheimer’s disease.
“But we can’t lose sight of the real major advances we’ve already made in treating dementia, including preventive approaches.
“The
potential magnitude of the effect on dementia of reducing these risk
factors is larger than we could ever imagine the effect that current,
experimental medications could have.
“Mitigating risk factors provides us a powerful way to reduce the global burden of dementia.”
The
Lancet Commission on Dementia Prevention and Care brought the experts
together to review a wealth of existing research and data and make
evidence-based recommendations.
Their conclusions are published in
The Lancet journal and were also presented at the Alzheimer’s
Association International Conference in London.
Around 47 million
people have dementia worldwide. That number is expected to climb as high
as 66 million by 2030 and 115 million by 2050.
In the UK an estimated 850,000 people are living with dementia, most of whom have Alzheimer’s.
The Lancet commission also looked at the effectiveness of non-medical treatments for people with dementia.
The
experts found that psychological and social interventions were better
than anti-psychotic drugs for treating dementia-related agitation and
aggression.
Some forms of non-medical therapy such as group cognitive stimulation and exercise led to improvements in mental ability.
Dr
Doug Brown, director of research at the charity Alzheimer’s Society,
said: “The revelation that over a third of dementia cases worldwide are,
in theory, entirely preventable is cause for celebration.
“But to
achieve even close to this kind of reduction in cases we need to
consider two important challenges – firstly how risk factors like
education, obesity and depression apply not just at a population level,
but to individual people who all have their own unique genetic risk
profiles, and secondly how we can motivate people in mid to late life to
change their behaviour and adopt healthier lifestyle choices.
“Not
all of the nine risk factors identified are easily modifiable, factors
like poor education and social isolation are incredibly challenging to
address.
“But there are easier wins, particularly cardiovascular factors like lowering blood pressure and smoking cessation.”
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Third of dementia cases ‘entirely preventable’
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