Social exposome and brain health outcomes of dementia across Latin America
Nat Commun. 2025 Sep 11;16(1):8196. doi: 10.1038/s41467-025-63277-6.
ABSTRACT
A multidimensional social exposome (MSE)-the combined lifespan measures of education, food insecurity, financial status, access to healthcare, childhood experiences, and more-may shape dementia risk and brain health over the lifespan, particularly in underserved regions like Latin America. However, the MSE effects on brain health and dementia are unknown. We evaluated 2211 individuals (controls, Alzheimer's disease, and frontotemporal lobar degeneration) from a non-representative sample across six Latin American countries. Adverse exposomes associate with poorer cognition in healthy aging. In dementia, more complex exposomes correlate with lower cognitive and functional performance, higher neuropsychiatric symptoms, and brain structural and connectivity alterations in frontal-temporal-limbic and cerebellar regions. Food insecurity, financial resources, subjective socioeconomic status, and access to healthcare emerge as critical predictors. Cumulative exposome measures surpass isolated factors in predicting clinical-cognitive profiles. Multiple sensitivity analyses confirm our results. Findings highlight the need for personalized approaches integrating MSE across the lifespan, emphasizing prevention and interventions targeting social disparities.
PMID:40935836 | DOI:10.1038/s41467-025-63277-6
Authors
Joaquín Migeot, MSc, PhD
Neuroscientist
Stefanie Piña Escudero, MD
Geriatrician
Sol Fittipaldi, PhD
Neuroscientist
Elisa França Resende, MD, PhD
Neurologist
Claudia Duran-Aniotz, MSc, PhD
Neurobiologist
Adolfo M. García, PhD
Neuroscientist
Maria Eugenia Godoy, MSc
Project Manager
Serggio Lanata, MD, MS
Associate Professor of Neurology
Brian Lawlor, MD, FRCPI, FRCPsych, MRIA
Founding Director, Trinity College Dublin
Bruce Miller, MD
Founding Director, University of California, San Francisco
Maira Okada de Oliveira, PhD
Neuropsychologist
Pablo Alexander Reyes Gavilan, PhD
Neuropsychologist
Hernando Santamaría-García, MD, MSc, PhD
Psychiatrist and Researcher
Andrea Slachevsky, MD, PhD
Sven Vanneste, MS, MA, PhD
Professor of Psychology
Victor Valcour, MD, PhD
Site Director, University of California, San Francisco
Jennifer Yokoyama, PhD
Associate Professor of Neurology
Kate Possin, PhD
Professor of Neurology
Agustín Ibáñez, PhD
Neuroscientist