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Cambridge University Press, International Psychogeriatrics, p. 1-17, 2023

DOI: 10.1017/s1041610223000935

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Frequency of cognitive “super-aging” in three Australian samples using different diagnostic criteria

This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.
This paper was not found in any repository, but could be made available legally by the author.

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Abstract

ABSTRACT Objectives: To investigate the frequency of exceptional cognition (cognitive super-aging) in Australian older adults using different published definitions, agreement between definitions, and the relationship of super-aging status with function, brain imaging markers, and incident dementia. Design: Three longitudinal cohort studies. Setting: Participants recruited from the electoral roll, Australian Twins Registry, and community advertisements. Participants: Older adults (aged 65–106) without dementia from the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study (n = 1037; median age 78), Older Australian Twins Study (n = 361; median age 68), and Sydney Centenarian Study (n = 217; median age 97). Measurements: Frequency of super-aging was assessed using nine super-aging definitions based on performance on neuropsychological testing. Levels of agreement between definitions were calculated, and associations between super-aging status for each definition and functioning (Bayer ADL score), structural brain imaging measures, and incident dementia were explored. Results: Frequency of super-aging varied between 2.9 and 43.4 percent with more stringent definitions associated with lower frequency. Agreement between different criteria varied from poor (K = 0.04, AC1 = .24) to very good (K = 0.83, AC1 = .91) with better agreement between definitions using similar tests and cutoffs. Super-aging was associated with better functional performance (4.7–11%) and lower rates of incident dementia (hazard ratios 0.08–0.48) for most definitions. Super-aging status was associated with a lower burden of white matter hyperintensities (3.8–33.2%) for all definitions. Conclusions: The frequency of super-aging is strongly affected by the demographic and neuropsychological testing parameters used. Greater consistency in defining super-aging would enable better characterization of this exceptional minority.