Serum albumin, cognitive function, motor impairment, and survival prognosis in Parkinson disease

28 February 2023, 1:39 EST

Summary

Parkinson disease (PD) is the second most common neurodegenerative disorder, in which the main clinical manifestations include bradykinesia, rigidity, postural instability, and tremor. PD has an estimated prevalence of 0.3% in the United States and a similar prevalence in Europe.[1,2] Population aging contributes to the fast-growing prevalence of PD; indeed, by the 2030s, it is estimated that Asia will have over 60% of the world’s population aged ≥65 years. Thus, it appears that the majority of patients with PD worldwide will be from the Western Pacific Region.[3]


Original Article

Serum albumin, cognitive function, motor impairment, and survival prognosis in Parkinson disease

Medicine

Sun, Shujun; Wen, Yiyong; Li, Yandeng


Abstract

The role of albumin in Parkinson disease (PD) is not well understood, our study will investigate the association between the serum albumin level and risk of dementia, motor impairment, as well as survival outcome in PD. Data were obtained from the publicly available dataset in the DRYAD database (https://datadryad.org/). The original prospective study enrolled patients with PD from a single center in Japan between March 2004 and November 2007. Due to missing values, 242 and 274 participants were included in the study, in which we aimed to, respectively, analyze the relationship between serum albumin and cognitive function as well as motor impairment; additionally, 264 participants were included to assess the association between baseline serum albumin levels and risk of PD-related death with a median follow-up of 5.24 years. Compared to patients of the low tertile of albumin levels, Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) of patients of middle tertile increased 2.09 [95% confidence interval (CI) (0.45, 3.73), P = .013], independent of age, sex, PD duration, modified Hoehn-Yahr (mHY) stage, C-reactive protein (CRP) level, and use of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs). Further analysis revealed a positive curvilinear association between albumin and MMSE, with cutoff values of 3.9. As concentration serum albumin increased, the risk of severe motor impairment was grown [odds ratio (OR) 0.34 (95% CI 0.14,0.8), P = .013] after adjustment by age, sex, PD duration, MMSE scores, CRP level, and use of NSAIDs. Albumin levels increased per unit of mg/dL, and the risk of PD-related death reduced 0.74-fold with 95% CI (0.15, 0.86) (P = .021), independent of age, sex, PD disease duration, mHY stage, CRP levels, use of NSAIDs, and MMSE. Higher serum albumin levels were significantly association with the better cognitive function when albumin was <3.9 mg/dL, and played a protective role in severe motor impairment and PD-related death.


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