substantive-fix: address reviewer feedback (confidence_miscalibration)
Some checks failed
Mirror PR to Forgejo / mirror (pull_request) Has been cancelled
Some checks failed
Mirror PR to Forgejo / mirror (pull_request) Has been cancelled
This commit is contained in:
parent
0f077b2a18
commit
8d431588d1
1 changed files with 3 additions and 26 deletions
|
|
@ -1,29 +1,5 @@
|
|||
---
|
||||
type: claim
|
||||
domain: health
|
||||
description: Meta-analysis of 608,561 individuals finds loneliness retains significant dementia association after controlling for depression (HR 1.189) and cardiovascular factors (negligible effect), with vascular dementia (HR 1.735) exceeding Alzheimer's (HR 1.393)
|
||||
confidence: likely
|
||||
source: Coordinated meta-analysis, PMC11722644, 21 studies, N=608,561
|
||||
created: 2026-05-09
|
||||
title: "Loneliness independently increases all-cause dementia risk by 19-31% after adjusting for depression, with vascular dementia showing stronger association than Alzheimer's disease"
|
||||
agent: vida
|
||||
sourced_from: health/2026-05-09-pmc11722644-loneliness-dementia-meta-analysis-600k.md
|
||||
scope: causal
|
||||
sourcer: PMC11722644
|
||||
supports: ["social isolation costs Medicare 7 billion annually and carries mortality risk equivalent to smoking 15 cigarettes per day making loneliness a clinical condition not a personal problem", "medical care explains only 10-20 percent of health outcomes because behavioral social and genetic factors dominate as four independent methodologies confirm"]
|
||||
challenges: ["loneliness-increases-dementia-risk-50-percent-independently-of-depression-and-cardiovascular-disease"]
|
||||
related: ["loneliness-increases-dementia-risk-50-percent-independently-of-depression-and-cardiovascular-disease", "social isolation costs Medicare 7 billion annually and carries mortality risk equivalent to smoking 15 cigarettes per day making loneliness a clinical condition not a personal problem", "medical care explains only 10-20 percent of health outcomes because behavioral social and genetic factors dominate as four independent methodologies confirm"]
|
||||
---
|
||||
|
||||
# Loneliness independently increases all-cause dementia risk by 19-31% after adjusting for depression, with vascular dementia showing stronger association than Alzheimer's disease
|
||||
|
||||
This meta-analysis resolves the critical question of whether social isolation's dementia association operates independently of depression and cardiovascular disease. The unadjusted hazard ratio of 1.306 (95% CI 1.197-1.426) attenuates to 1.189 (95% CI 1.101-1.285) after controlling for both depression AND social isolation — a 9% reduction that leaves the association statistically significant. This demonstrates loneliness has an independent relationship with dementia beyond depressive symptoms.
|
||||
|
||||
Crucially, including cardiovascular risk factors (diabetes, hypertension, obesity) had "negligible effect" on the associations, suggesting CVD is NOT a primary mediating pathway. This contradicts the expected mechanism where social isolation → CVD → dementia, and instead supports direct neuroinflammatory or stress-mediated pathways.
|
||||
|
||||
The cause-specific analysis reveals differential effects: Alzheimer's disease HR = 1.393 (95% CI 1.290-1.504) versus vascular dementia HR = 1.735 (95% CI 1.483-2.029). The stronger vascular dementia association suggests inflammatory/vascular mechanisms rather than amyloid/tau pathways as the primary mediator.
|
||||
|
||||
This evidence base is stronger than prior estimates: the WHO's "50% elevated risk" figure comes from specific social frailty studies, while this larger, more rigorous analysis gives 19-31% depending on adjustment strategy. The persistence of effect after depression adjustment establishes loneliness as a dementia risk factor operating through mechanisms beyond mood disorders.
|
||||
```markdown
|
||||
## The Claim (current version)
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
## Challenging Evidence
|
||||
|
|
@ -31,3 +7,4 @@ This evidence base is stronger than prior estimates: the WHO's "50% elevated ris
|
|||
**Source:** Burden of Proof study group, PMC12726400, 41 studies
|
||||
|
||||
Burden of Proof methodology (designed to correct for publication bias and systematic biases in observational studies) finds social isolation → dementia association has mean RR 1.29 (95% UI 0.98–1.71) — confidence interval CROSSES 1.0, classifying this as 'possible but uncertain' association. Only 'lack of social activity' sub-measure shows CI that does not cross null (RR 1.34, 95% UI 1.05–1.71). The BoP methodology's greater conservatism compared to standard meta-analyses explains the divergence from the HR 1.189 finding.
|
||||
```
|
||||
Loading…
Reference in a new issue