A rapidly increasing proportion of people in high-income countries are surviving into
their tenth decade. Concern is widespread that the basis for this development is the
survival of frail and disabled elderly people into very old age. To investigate this
issue, we compared the cognitive and physical functioning of two cohorts of Danish
nonagenarians, born 10 years apart.
People in the first cohort were born in 1905 and assessed at age 93 years (n=2262);
those in the second cohort were born in 1915 and assessed at age 95 years (n=1584).
All cohort members were eligible irrespective of type of residence. Both cohorts were
assessed by surveys that used the same design and assessment instrument, and had almost
identical response rates (63%). Cognitive functioning was assessed by mini-mental
state examination and a composite of five cognitive tests that are sensitive to age-related
changes. Physical functioning was assessed by an activities of daily living score
and by physical performance tests (grip strength, chair stand, and gait speed).
The chance of surviving from birth to age 93 years was 28% higher in the 1915 cohort
than in the 1905 cohort (6·50% vs 5·06%), and the chance of reaching 95 years was
32% higher in 1915 cohort (3·93% vs 2·98%). The 1915 cohort scored significantly better
on the mini-mental state examination than did the 1905 cohort (22·8 [SD 5·6] vs 21·4
[6·0]; p<0·0001), with a substantially higher proportion of participants obtaining
maximum scores (28-30 points; 277 [23%] vs 235 [13%]; p<0·0001). Similarly, the cognitive
composite score was significantly better in the 1915 than in the 1905 cohort (0·49
[SD 3·6] vs 0·01 [SD 3·6]; p=0·0003). The cohorts did not differ consistently in the
physical performance tests, but the 1915 cohort had significantly better activities
of daily living scores than did the 1905 cohort (2·0 [SD 0·8] vs 1·8 [0·7]; p<0·0001).
Despite being 2 years older at assessment, the 1915 cohort scored significantly better
than the 1905 cohort on both the cognitive tests and the activities of daily living
score, which suggests that more people are living to older ages with better overall
functioning.
Danish National Research Foundation; US National Institutes of Health-National Institute
on Aging; Danish Agency for Science, Technology and Innovation; VELUX Foundation.
Copyright © 2013 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.