Purpose: Anticholinergic medication use measured via the Anticholinergic Cognitive Burden (ACB) scale has been associated with an increased dementia incidence in older adults but has not been explored specifically for Parkinson disease dementia (PDD). We used adjusted Cox models to estimate the risk of incident PDD associated with demographic factors, clinical characteristics, and time-varying total ACB in a longitudinal, deeply-phenotyped prospective PD cohort.
Major findings: 56.5% of study participants were taking ACB-scale drugs at enrollment. Increasing age, motor symptom burden and psychosis were associated with PDD risk. Female sex and educational achievement were protective against PDD. ACB categories were not associated with PDD overall, but depression and impulse control disorder were strongly associated with PDD in a subsample with high baseline ACB.
Conclusions: Patient and clinical factors modify PDD risk. PD drug safety and drug-disease interaction studies may require considering multiple mechanisms and including dose-based, prospectively acquired medication exposure measures.
Keywords: Parkinson disease; anticholinergic burden; cognitive impairment; dementia.