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. 2022 Apr 15;13(4):319–337. doi: 10.4239/wjd.v13.i4.319

Table 3.

Summary of studies relating diabetes and Alzheimer's disease

Ref.
Study
n
Conclusion
Ott et al[33], 1999 Prospective population-based cohort 6370 older adults Diabetes mellitus almost doubled the risk of dementia. Patients treated with insulin were at highest risk of dementia
Luchsinger et al[34], 2005 Longitudinal 1138 older adults Four risk factors (diabetes, hypertension, heart disease, and current smoking) were associated with a higher risk of AD. The risk of AD increased with the number of vascular risk factors. Diabetes and current smoking were the strongest risk factors
Xu et al[38], 2009 Population-based cohort study 1248 dementia-free cohort Uncontrolled diabetes increases the risk of Alzheimer's disease and VD. Their findings suggest a direct link between glucose dysregulation and neurodegeneration
Wang et al[36], 2012 Population-based cohort study 615529 diabetic patients; 614871 random controls Diabetes may increase the risk of AD in both sexes and all ages
Tolppanen et al[40], 2013 Case-Control study 3012 diabetic patients; 3372 AD Individuals with clinically verified AD are more likely to have a history of clinically verified and medically treated diabetes than the general aged population, although the difference is small
Huang et al[37], 2014 Population-based cohort study 1000000 random controls; 71433 diabetic patients Newly diagnosed DM was associated with an increased risk of AD. The use of hypoglycemic agents did not ameliorate the risk
Gudala et al[35], 2013 Meta-analysis 28 studies The results showed a 73% increased risk of all type of demetia, 56% increase of AD, and 127% increase of VD in diabetes patients
Biessels et al[19], 2006 Meta-analysis 14 studies There is convincing evidence that shows an increased risk of dementia in people with diabetes. The risk factors and mechanisms that drive the association between diabetes and accelerated cognitive decline and dementia need to be identified before adequate treatment measures can be developed
Cheng et al[41], 2012 Meta-analysis 19 studies Diabetes was a risk factor for incident dementia (including AD, VD, and any dementia) and MCI
Zhang et al[42], 2017 Meta-analysis 17 studies The risk of AD is higher among people with diabetes than in the general population

DM: Diabetes mellitus; AD: Alzheimer’s disease; VD: Vascular dementia; MCI: Mild cognitive impairment.