A large observational cohort study examining male veterans aged over
50 years with type 2 diabetes found that metformin use was associated
with a significantly lower risk of dementia in African American
patients. The study included data from 73,500 patients who received care
through the Veteran's Health Administration from 2000-2015 and were
diabetes- and dementia-free at baseline and who subsequently developed
type 2 diabetes and began treatment with either metformin or
sulfonylurea. Cox proportional hazards models, using propensity scores
and inverse probability treatment to balance confounding factors, were
computed to measure the association of both drugs and incident dementia
across race and age groups. For African American patients aged 50-64
years, the hazard ratio for developing dementia was 0.60 (CI,
0.45-0.81), and for African American patients aged 65-74 years, the
hazard ratio was 0.71 (CI, 0.53-0.94). The study showed modest to no
association between metformin and lower risk for dementia in white
patients 65-74 and no association in other age groups. The present
results may point to a novel approach for reducing dementia risk in
African Americans with type 2 diabetes mellitus.
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