Historic Cognitive Function Trajectories as Predictors of Sedentary Behavior and Physical Activity in Older Adults

J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 2024 Jul 1;79(7):glae125. doi: 10.1093/gerona/glae125.

Abstract

Background: We examined whether trajectories of cognitive function over 10 years predict later-life physical activity (PA), sedentary time (ST), and sleep.

Methods: Participants were from the Adult Changes in Thought (ACT) cohort study. We included 611 ACT participants who wore accelerometers and had 3+ measures of cognition in the 10 years prior to accelerometer wear. The Cognitive Assessment Screening Instrument (CASI) measured cognition and was scored using item-response theory (IRT). activPAL and ActiGraph accelerometers worn over 7 days measured ST and PA outcomes. Self-reported time in bed and sleep quality measured sleep outcomes. Analyses used growth mixture modeling to classify CASI-IRT scores into latent groups and examine associations with PA, ST, and sleep including demographic and health covariates.

Results: Participants (Mean age = 80.3 (6.5) years, 90.3% White, 57.1% female, 29.3% had less than 16 years of education) fell into 3 latent trajectory groups: average stable CASI (56.1%), high stable CASI (34.0%), and declining CASI (9.8%). The declining group had 16 minutes less stepping time (95% confidence interval [95% CI]: 0.6, 31.4), 1 517 fewer steps per day (95% CI: 138, 2 896), and 16.3 minutes per day less moderate-to-vigorous PA (95% CI: 1.3, 31.3) compared to the average stable group. There were no associations between CASI trajectory and sedentary or sleep outcomes.

Conclusions: Declining cognition predicted lower PA providing some evidence of a reverse relationship between PA and cognition in older adults. However, this conclusion is limited by having outcomes at only one time point, a nonrepresentative sample, self-reported sleep outcomes, and using a global cognition measure.

Keywords: Cognitive aging; Exercise; Sedentary time; Sleep.

MeSH terms

  • Accelerometry*
  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Cognition* / physiology
  • Exercise*
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Sedentary Behavior*
  • Sleep / physiology