Abstract
Background and Objective
The possible adverse or positive effects of levothyroxine treatment among patients with atrial fibrillation have been debated. Atrial fibrillation, levothyroxine treatment, and dementia are common among older adults, yet little is known about the effects of levothyroxine on the development of dementia.
Methods
The study population included all adults (n = 12,057) aged ≥ 45 years with a diagnosis of atrial fibrillation at 75 primary care centers in Sweden during 2001–2007 without an earlier recorded dementia diagnosis. Patients with a diagnosis of hypothyroidism and levothyroxine prescription (n = 756; 180 men and 576 women), or with a prescription without this diagnosis (n = 415, 100 men and 315 women), were compared to patients without a diagnosis and prescription (n = 10,886). Cox regression was performed, with hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals, with outcome defined as dementia of all causes until 31 December, 2010.
Results
During a mean 5.7 years (standard deviation 2.4 years) of follow-up, a total of 749 patients with atrial fibrillation (6.2%) were diagnosed with dementia. Women with hypothyroidism and a levothyroxine prescription showed lower hazard ratios (0.61; 0.41–0.90) in adjusted Cox regression models (age, socioeconomic factors, co-morbidity, and warfarin treatment). Levothyroxine prescription without hypothyroidism was non-significant.
Conclusions
We found that women with atrial fibrillation with levothyroxine treatment and hypothyroidism have a lower risk of incident dementia than women with atrial fibrillation without levothyroxine treatment and no hypothyroidism. The results should be confirmed in larger studies.
Similar content being viewed by others
Women with atrial fibrillation with levothyroxine treatment and hypothyroidism showed a lower risk of incident dementia than those without this treatment and diagnosis. |
The effect in women with levothyroxine treatment and hypothyroidism was further exaggerated when removing the youngest and oldest women from the analyses. |
Levothyroxine without a diagnosis of hypothyroidism showed no effect on incident dementia. |
1 Introduction
Earlier research regarding thyroid function and dementia has shown conflicting results. In a review from The Swedish Council on Health Technology Assessment in Health Care, the conclusion was that there is lack of evidence of the association between the cognitive impairment due to disturbed thyroid function and the development of dementia [1]. As dementia is not a single diagnosis but rather a cluster of different diagnoses with somewhat different risk factor patterns, a clear summary of the research field is rather difficult, with some contradictory findings. However, risk factor patterns are similar between different types of dementia [2]. One older study found hypothyroidism to be more common in patients with Alzheimer’s dementia (AD) compared with those without this diagnosis [3], while another found subclinical hyperthyroidism but not subclinical hypothyroidism to be associated with an increased risk of dementia [4, 5]. A recent study found hypothyroidism to be associated with cerebrovascular diseases but not with AD pathology [6]. Higher levels of free thyroxin have repeatedly been shown to be associated with incident dementia [7, 8]. Animal models have shown hypothyroidism to induce the amyloidogenic pathway of amyloid precursor protein processing in the hippocampus [9].
Atrial fibrillation (AF) is increasingly common with age and also associated with an increased risk of dementia [10,11,12]. The most important factor behind the increased risk of dementia is the increased risk of cardio-embolic stroke [12], with anticoagulant treatment being the most evidence-based treatment to prevent dementia in patients with AF [13, 14]. In an AD animal model of mice, thyroid hormones have been shown to prevent cognitive deficit [15], and in a similar way in an AD model of rats to improve histological changes and memory [16]. The dementia risk in relation to the age of onset of AF has shown conflicting results in studies of patients with AF [12]. One study found an association between AF and dementia for elderly individuals only [17], whereas another large study found the highest association in subjects younger than 70 years of age [18]. Another study analyzing the onset of AD in relation to age, found the most important factors for early onset of AD to be APOE haplotypes, marital status, and history of depression, whereas dementia risk in later life seemed to be influenced by prevalent cerebrovascular risk factors [19].
The relationship between hypothyroidism, levothyroxine, and survival has been elucidated in earlier research, where hypothyroidism and levothyroxine treatment was associated with a lower cardiovascular risk and mortality [20], even if the potential mechanism explaining the association between levothyroxine treatment and mortality is unknown. Women have a higher prevalence of hypothyroidism and are more commonly treated with levothyroxine [21]. Women with AF also exert a higher relative risk of stroke than men with AF [22]. Hence, we believe that men and women should be analyzed separately. The primary aim was to study the association between levothyroxine treatment and dementia among patients with AF and hypothyroidism in Swedish primary care.
2 Methods
2.1 Study Design
The study was based on individual-level patient data from 75 primary healthcare centers (PHCCs), 48 of which were located in Stockholm County. Individuals attending any of the participating PHCCs between 2001 and 2008 were included in the study. We used Extractor software to extract electronic patient records (EPRs) [23]. National identification numbers were replaced with new unique serial numbers to ensure anonymity. The files were linked to a database constructed using the Swedish Total Population Register, the Hospital Discharge Register, and the Swedish Cause-of-Death Register, which contains individual-level data on age, sex, education, hospital admissions, mortality, and cause of death for all residents registered in Sweden. Thus, a new research database containing clinical data and information on socioeconomic status (SES) on the individuals (n = 1,098,420) registered at the 75 PHCCs was created [24]. Ethical approvals were obtained from regional boards at Karolinska Institute and the University of Lund.
2.2 Study Population
The study included all patients with diagnosed AF, identified by the presence of the World Health Organization’s International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision for AF (I48) in EPRs in primary healthcare, and who visited any of the 75 participating PHCCs from 1 January, 2001, until 31 December, 2007. We excluded patients with an earlier diagnosis of dementia (n = 187), and also patients with a diagnosis of hypothyroidism without a prescription of levothyroxine (n = 39). Patients without data on neighborhood SES were also excluded [Table 1 of the Electronic Supplementary Material (ESM)]. In total, 12,057 individuals (6580 men and 5516 women) aged ≥ 45 years at the time of AF diagnosis were included. Prescription of levothyroxine (H03AA01) in the EPR in at least one occasion was recorded.
2.3 Outcomes and Confounders
A diagnosis of dementia of any type according to the International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision classification in EPRs from hospitals, or from the death register, was used as the primary outcome (F00 Alzheimer’s dementia, F01 Vascular dementia, F02 Dementia in other diseases classified elsewhere, F03 Unspecified dementia, F10.7A Alcohol dementia, F10.97Alcohol use, unspecified with alcohol-induced persisting dementia, or G30 Alzheimer’s disease). For the primary outcome, time to diagnosis of dementia after first AF diagnosis was registered (until 31 December, 2010). Individuals were divided into the following pre-specified age groups 45–54, 55–64, 65–74, 75–84, and ≥ 85 years.
Educational level was categorized according to pre-specification as ≤ 9 years (partial or complete compulsory schooling), 10–12 years (partial or complete secondary schooling), and > 12 years (college and/or university studies). Marital status was classified as married, unmarried, divorced, or widowed. The neighborhood SES areas were categorized into three groups according the neighborhood index: > one standard deviation (SD) below the mean (high SES or low deprivation level), > one SD above the mean (low SES or high deprivation level), and within one SD of the mean (middle SES or deprivation level).
The following related disorders were used as covariates (International Classification of Diseases, 10th Revision codes in the ESM): hypertension, coronary heart disease, cerebrovascular diseases, congestive heart failure (CHF), obesity, diabetes mellitus, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), depression, or anxiety disorders (see the ESM). Patients with a prescription of levothyroxine without a registered diagnosis of hypothyroidism (n = 415) were identified and analyzed separately. Furthermore, CHA2DS2-VASc was used, i.e., an instrument for predicting ischemic stroke in patients with AF, including congestive heart failure, hypertension, age between 65 and 74 years yields one point, and 75 years and above two points, diabetes mellitus, a history of stroke or previous transient ischemic attacks and thromboembolism two points, and the presence of any cardiovascular disease is credited with one point (recorded as myocardial infarction, peripheral artery disease, or plaque in the aorta) [25].
2.4 Statistics
Descriptive data were shown as mean with SD for age, otherwise by numbers and percentages. Logistic regression with odds ratios and 95% confidence intervals was performed, comparing patients with hypothyroidism and levothyroxine prescription, or patients with levothyroxine prescription without a registered diagnosis of hypothyroidism, to patients with neither a hypothyroidism diagnosis nor a levothyroxine prescription.
Cox regression with hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals, using time to dementia as the outcome, was used in follow-up analyses for patients with hypothyroidism and levothyroxine treatment, or patients with levothyroxine prescription without a registered diagnosis of hypothyroidism, compared to patients without both a hypothyroidism diagnosis and a levothyroxine prescription. We used regression models with full adjustment, i.e., for age (and sex, when applicable), socioeconomic factors (educational level, marital status, neighborhood SES, and change of SES neighborhood), co-morbidity (hypertension, coronary heart disease, CHF, cerebrovascular diseases, obesity, diabetes, COPD, depression, and anxiety), and warfarin treatment (B01AA03). Furthermore, as risk factors for dementia differ over age, we also analyzed patients with the lowest and highest quartile of age at first recorded diagnosis of AF excluded, thus including patients aged 77–85 years (25th–75th percentile). As a supplementary analysis, we also studied incident dementia in relation to CHA2DS2-VASc scores. A two-sided p value of < 0.05 was considered statistically significant for variables in the regression analyses. All analyses were performed in STATA 15.2 (StataCorp, 4905 Lakeway Drive, College Station, Texas 77845 USA).
3 Results
Characteristics of the study population (n = 12,057 individuals) are shown separately for men (n = 6580) and women (n = 5516) and also divided into individuals with a diagnosis of hypothyroidism and levothyroxine treatment, patients with levothyroxine prescription without a registered diagnosis of hypothyroidism, and those without a diagnosis of hypothyroidism and no levothyroxine treatment (Table 1). Median age for dementia was 79 years among men and 81 years among women. The mean follow-up time was 5.7 years (SD 2.4), and hazard ratios were calculated based on 68,977 person-years at risk (38,141 person-years among men and 30,836 person-years among women). The incidence rate of all types of dementia per 100 patient-years was 0.84 (95% confidence interval 0.76–0.94) in men, and 1.38 (95% confidence interval 1.26–1.52) in women.
Multivariate logistic regression models for subjects with levothyroxine prescription with a diagnosis of hypothyroidism, or patients with levothyroxine prescription without a registered diagnosis of hypothyroidism, vs. subjects without hypothyroidism or levothyroxine treatment are shown in Table 2. Hypothyroidism among women was more associated with obesity and depression, and less associated with cerebrovascular diseases and new dementia. Levothyroxine treatment without a registered diagnosis of hypothyroidism among women was associated with a higher frequency of CHF, diabetes, and COPD, and associated with a lower frequency of hypertension. In men, levothyroxine treatment without a registered diagnosis of hypothyroidism was associated with a higher frequency of CHF.
Table 3 shows Cox regression models for incident dementia for subjects with hypothyroidism and levothyroxine treatment, or levothyroxine treatment without a registered diagnosis of hypothyroidism, vs. subjects with neither diagnosis nor treatment. The hazard ratio was decreased in women, and also further decreased when excluding women in the lowest and highest quartiles of age. In women and men combined, the relative risk was also significantly lower but only when excluding the lowest and highest quartiles of age. In the group with levothyroxine without a registered diagnosis of hypothyroidism, no such effect was seen (results for men and women combined only shown).
We also analyzed incident dementia in relation to CHA2DS2-VASc scores (Table 1 of the ESM), with exclusion of subjects with levothyroxine treatment without a registered diagnosis of hypothyroidism. Among men, a significant trend was found, both with regard to individuals without hypothyroidism (p < 0.001), and with hypothyroidism and levothyroxine treatment (p = 0.021), while no such association was found among women.
4 Discussion
4.1 Main Findings
The main finding of this study was that women with AF and hypothyroidism and prescribed levothyroxine treatment had a lower risk of dementia than women with AF without hypothyroidism and prescribed levothyroxine treatment. No effect on incident dementia in patients with prescribed levothyroxine treatment without a registered diagnosis of hypothyroidism was seen.
4.2 Comparison with Earlier Research
Earlier studies have shown conflicting results, with an earlier review concluding that there is no association between cognitive disturbances and dementia due to thyroid dysfunction [1]. However, in some studies, thyroid dysfunction is described as a risk factor for dementia, both with regard to hyper- and hypothyroidism, and even in subclinical disorders [4, 5]. Furthermore, there are studies showing an increased risk of cerebrovascular diseases associated with treated hypothyroidism [3, 6], which contrasts our findings of a lower risk of dementia, and a lower association with cerebrovascular diseases, in women with AF and hypothyroidism. In an earlier study, we found cerebrovascular diseases to be associated with prevalent dementia among men in all ages and among women aged younger than 75 years, while cerebrovascular diseases were negatively associated with incident dementia among women [26].
We also chose to perform analyses with exclusion of the lowest and highest quartile of age of onset of AF, as types of dementia differ during life, with unusual diseases leading to special forms of dementia being more common among younger subjects [27, 28]. If an effect by levothyroxine should be expected to be seen, it should most probably be in the ages between the youngest and the oldest age groups, which also was the case in the present study.
Thus, we can only conclude that there are different findings regarding the association between hypothyroidism, cerebrovascular diseases, and dementia for which we have no good explanation, and this needs to be further explored. It is possible that the role of AF is limited in the present study, and that it should be viewed as a study of high-risk patients for dementia. Thus, our results, in general, may also be valid in patients with thyroid dysfunction.
4.3 Possible Mechanism of Levothyroxine Effect on Dementia Development
Thyroid hormones are important in the development of the brain in early life, with otherwise deleterious effects such as in congenital hypothyroidism [29, 30]. Thyroid hormones are also positively related to memory even in euthyroid men [31]. In addition, hypothyroidism is associated with depression in a bi-directional manner [32], and depression is a risk factor in itself for dementia [33]. Furthermore, an improvement of oxidative status in women with hypothyroidism is shown [34]. Results from animal models show different possible mechanisms, e.g., improvement in hippocampus function [35], and possibly also an augmentation of cholinergic activity [36].
4.4 Results in Patients with Levothyroxine but Without Hypothyroidism
Around 35% of patients treated with levothyroxine were not registered with a diagnosis of hypothyroidism. This group showed a different pattern compared with patients with hypothyroidism and subsequent levothyroxine treatment. The reason for levothyroxine treatment in this group is unknown. One possibility is that the patients were not taken care of in primary care, which could be the reason why we could not confirm a diagnosis of hypothyroidism, even if this seems unlikely as they were prescribed levothyroxine. It is also unclear why this group was not found to exhibit a lower risk of incident dementia. CHF was more common in both men and women with levothyroxine prescription but without a diagnosis of hypothyroidism. In an earlier study, we found CHF positively associated with prevalent dementia but negatively with incident dementia [26]. Furthermore, being registered with a diagnosis of hypothyroidism has been shown to be associated with a lower mortality risk compared with only a levothyroxine prescription among both men and women with AF [20].
A major strength of this study was that we were able to link clinical data from individual EPRs to data from national demographic and socioeconomic registers with < 1% of information missing. As already mentioned, we also supplied diagnoses from primary health care EPRs with hospital diagnoses of dementia, CHF, coronary heart disease, and cardiovascular disease. Moreover, randomized controlled trials often exclude individuals with co-morbidities such as patients with AF with concomitant diabetes and CHF. In the current study, we were able to include these patients in the analyses, which means that the findings are more representative of the variety of patients encountered in clinical practice today.
5 Conclusions and Limitations
We found women with hypothyroidism and levothyroxine treatment to have a lower risk of dementia than women with AF without hypothyroidism and no levothyroxine treatment. Levothyroxine treatment without a registered diagnosis of hypothyroidism showed no such effect. Although the results are interesting, they have to be confirmed in larger studies.
There are several limitations of this study that must be kept in mind when interpreting the results. The number of men with AF and levothyroxine treatment was low, limiting possible conclusions in men. However, the number of female patients was considerably larger. We included patients with AF registered in primary care, and another study showed that 36% of all registered patients with AF in Stockholm County were not registered with a diagnosis in primary healthcare [37]. Clinical diagnoses were mostly taken from EPRs in primary care, however, with the addition of diagnoses from hospital for dementia, CHF, myocardial infarction, and stroke. Furthermore, we did not have access to the use of sedative, hypnotic, or anticholinergic drugs. Another limitation is the study design, i.e., an observational study. Like in every observational cohort study, there may have been residual confounding present. The findings may have been subject to survival treatment selection bias [38], meaning that those treated live longer and may thus have a higher risk of developing dementia. We have earlier found that CHF and cerebrovascular diseases in patients with AF are associated with an increased mortality [39].
As dementia is not a single diagnosis, grouping all separate diagnoses into an overall dementia diagnosis is questionable, especially as risk factors for the different dementia diagnoses differ. In the present study, we grouped all dementia diagnoses together to be able to have enough statistical power for the analyses. However, this is also performed in other studies as well [4, 8, 10], and in the clinical situation this is more relevant for doctors as well as patients. As dementia is a cluster of disorders developing over many years, patients may die as a result of other causes before getting a dementia diagnosis, i.e., because of a competing risk, which could affect the results. We did not have access to whether levothyroxine treatment was used on a long-term basis, although in most cases treatment with levothyroxine is lifelong. Moreover, AF could not be classified as paroxysmal, persistent, or permanent and heart rhythm could not be classified as sinus rhythm or fibrillation rhythm. Additionally, we had no access to kidney function.
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PW, ACC, JS, and KS designed the study, PW and ACC analyzed the data, and all authors participated in the interpretation of the data; PW and ACC drafted the manuscript and JS and KS revised it critically for important intellectual content.
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This work was supported by ALF funding ("Avtal om Läkarutbildning och Forskning", in English "Agreement on Medical Education and Research") awarded to Jan Sundquist and Kristina Sundquist and by grants from the Swedish Research Council (awarded to Kristina Sundquist), the Swedish Council for Working Life and Social Research (awarded to Jan Sundquist), and the National Heart, Lung, and Blood Institute of the National Institutes of Health under Award Number R01HL116381 (awarded to Kristina Sundquist).
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Per Wändell, Axel C. Carlsson, Jan Sundquist, and Kristina Sundquist have no conflicts of interest that are directly relevant to the contents of this article.
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All procedures in this study were in accordance with the 1964 Helsinki Declaration (and its amendments). The study was approved by the Regional Ethical Boards at Karolinska Institute (Diarie numbers 12/2000 and 2002-09-19) and the University of Lund (Diarie number 409/2008, with addition 19/1 2010).
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No written informed consent was obtained from patients, as the study used anonymous register data.
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Wändell, P., Carlsson, A.C., Sundquist, J. et al. Effect of Levothyroxine Treatment on Incident Dementia in Adults with Atrial Fibrillation and Hypothyroidism. Clin Drug Investig 39, 187–195 (2019). https://doi.org/10.1007/s40261-018-0740-3
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s40261-018-0740-3