AS183 - Effects of hormone therapy on subclinical neurological pathology: WHIMS-MRI

Investigator Names and Contact Information

Sally Shumaker (sshumake@wakehealth.edu)

Introduction/Intent

Please see the WHIMS data overview page for AS183.

Related Papers

Cognitive function and retinal and ischemic brain changes: The Women’s Health Initiative

Mary Haan et al., 2012/3 PubMed #22422889 MSID: 1150
To examine the association between retinopathy and cognitive decline or brain lesions and volumes in older women.This study included 511 women aged 65 and older who were simultaneously enrolled in the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study and the Sight Examination Study. In this analysis, we examined the link between retinopathy, assessed using fundus photography (2000-2002), cognitive performance over time assessed by the modified Mini-Mental State Examination (3MSE) (1996-2007), and white mat...
Keywords: Retinopathy; Brain Mri; Cognition
Related Studies: 39, 62, 183

Obesity and structural brain integrity in older women: The Women's Health Initiative Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study

Ira Driscoll et al., 2016/3 PubMed #26961581 MSID: 1115
BACKGROUND: Midlife obesity has been linked to age-related brain atrophy and risk of dementia, but the relationships are less clear for older individuals. These associations may be explained by changes in appetite or metabolism in the dementia prodrome; thus, prospective studies with adequate follow-up are needed. We examined the associations that obesity (body mass index, BMI) and change in BMI over an average of 6.6 (1.0-9.1) years have with global and regional brain and white matter lesion vo...
Keywords: Mri; Brain Volume; Obesity; Central Adiposity; Weight Change
Related Studies: 183

Psychological attitudes and neuroanatomy: the women's health initiative magnetic resonance imaging study

Approved Manuscript, So, Cynthia et al., 2014/12 MSID: 937
Keywords: Psychological Attitudes; Neuroanatomy; Cardiovascular Disease; Mortality
Related Studies: 183

Pregnancy and breastfeeding are associated with less later-life cognitive decline in a longitudinal, prospective cohort

Approved Manuscript, Fox, Molly et al., 2025/4 MSID: 4586
Keywords: Pregnancy; Breastfeeding; Reproductive History; Alzheimer’S; Dementia; Brain Volumes; Hippocampus
Related Studies: 83, 103, 183

Postmenopausal hormone therapy, type 2 diabetes mellitus, and brain volumes

Mark Espeland et al., 2015/7 PubMed #26163429 MSID: 2428
To examine whether the effect of postmenopausal hormone therapy (HT) on brain volumes in women aged 65-79 years differs depending on type 2 diabetes status during postintervention follow-up of a randomized controlled clinical trial.The Women's Health Initiative randomized clinical trials assigned women to HT (0.625 mg/day conjugated equine estrogens with or without 2.5 mg/day medroxyprogesterone acetate) or placebo for an average of 5.6 years. A total of 1,402 trial participants underwent brain ...
Keywords: Brain Mri; Hormone Therapy; And Diabetes
Related Studies: 183

Change in brain and lesion volumes after CEE therapies: The WHIMS-MRI studies

Laura Coker et al., 2014/1 PubMed #24384646 MSID: 1414
To determine whether smaller brain volumes in older women who had completed Women's Health Initiative (WHI)-assigned conjugated equine estrogen-based hormone therapy (HT), reported by WHI Memory Study (WHIMS)-MRI, correspond to a continuing increased rate of atrophy an average of 6.1 to 7.7 years later in WHIMS-MRI2.A total of 1,230 WHI participants were contacted: 797 (64.8%) consented, and 729 (59%) were rescanned an average of 4.7 years after the initial MRI scan. Mean annual rates of change ...
Keywords: Brain Mri; Atrophy; Postmenopausal Hormone Therapy
Related Studies: 183

Effect of physical activity on brain volume in WHIMS-MRI

Approved Proposal, Erickson, Kirk et al., 2011/11 MSID: 1631
Keywords: Physical Activity; Exercise; Brain; Cognition; Dementia; Impairment
Related Studies: 183

Imaging genetics to study the link between depressive symptoms and Alzheimer’s disease

Approved Proposal, Goveas, Joseph et al., 2012/12 MSID: 2001
Keywords: Late-Life Depression; Structural Mri; Cognition; Brain Volumes; Ischemic Lesion Load; Candidate Genes
Related Studies: 183

A prospective association between calcium intake and white matter lesions in older women: The Women’s Health Initiative MRI Study

Approved Proposal, Payne, Martha E. et al., 2012/4 MSID: 1786
Keywords: Calcium; Aging; Diet; Ischemia
Related Studies: 183

A longitudinal association between higher calcium intake and white matter lesion subtypes in older women: The Women’s Health Initiative MRI Study

Approved Proposal, Payne, Martha E. et al., 2012/4 MSID: 1787
Keywords: Calcium; Aging; Diet; Periventricular
Related Studies: 183

Antidepressant exposure and cross-sectional and longitudinal changes in brain volumes and ischemic lesion load in women: The WHIMS-MRI2 Study

Approved Proposal, Goveas, Joseph et al., 2011/7 MSID: 1525
Keywords: Antidepressants; Late-Life Depression; Structural Mri; Cognition; Brain Volumes; Ischemic Lesion Load
Related Studies: 183

Relationship of depressive symptoms with cross-sectional and longitudinal brain volumes in elderly women: The WHIMS-MRI2 Study

Approved Manuscript, Beavers, Daniel et al., 2016/10 MSID: 1526
Keywords: Late-Life Depression; Structural Mri; Cognition; Brain Volumes; Ischemic Lesion Load
Related Studies: 183

Associations between physical activity and regional brain volume and white matter lesions in the WHIMS-MRI cohort

Approved Proposal, Smith, J. Carson et al., 2011/11 MSID: 1498
Keywords: Exercise; Physical Activity; Genetic Risk; Apoe; Cognitive Status; Mri; Gray Matter Volume
Related Studies: 183

How women’s reproductive life-history predicts post-menopausal atrophy

Approved Proposal, Bramen, Jennifer et al., 2024/9 MSID: 5186
Keywords: Pregnancy; Breastfeeding; Reproductive History; Alzheimer’S; Dementia; Cortical Thickness; Gray Matter Density; Hippocampus; Amygdala.
Related Studies: 39, 103, 183

Predicting longitudinal structural brain change from baseline measures using machine learning

Approved Proposal, Sreepada, Lasya et al., 2021/1 MSID: 4379
Keywords: Neuroimaging; Structural Brain Mri; Brain Volume; Machine Learning; Harmonization; Longitudinal Analysis; Aging; Cognitive Impairment
Related Studies: 183

Influence of brain aging on physical function in older, postmenopausal women

Approved Proposal, Wanigatunga, Amal et al., 2015/9 MSID: 2836
Keywords: Brain; Physical Function; Muscle Strength; Gray Matter; Imaging; Aging
Related Studies: 183, W64

Erythrocyte omega-3 index, ambient fine particle exposure and brain aging

Publication, Chen, Jiu-Chiuan et al., 2019/3 MSID: 3369
Related Studies: 39, 183, 252

Moderating effect of antioxidant intakes on brain aging associated with particulate air pollution exposure in older women

Approved Proposal, He, Ka et al., 2017/5 MSID: 3370
Related Studies: 39, 183, 252

B vitamin intakes modify the association between particulate air pollutants and incidence of all-cause dementia: Findings from the Women’s Health Initiative Memory Study

Cheng Chen et al., 2022/2 PubMed #35103387 MSID: 3371
Introduction: Particulate air pollutants may induce neurotoxicity by increasing homocysteine levels, which can be lowered by high B vitamin intakes. Therefore, we examined whether intakes of three B vitamins (folate, B12 , and B6 ) modified the association between PM2.5 exposure and incidence of all-cause dementia. Methods: This study included 7183 women aged 65 to 80 years at baseline. B vitamin intakes from diet and supplements were estimated by food frequency questionnaires at baseline. The 3...
Keywords: Cognition Disorders; Dementia; Air Pollution; Postmenopausal Women; Diet; B Vitamins
Related Studies: 39, 183, 252

Which biological pathways govern motherhood-related Alzheimer’s Disease resilience

Approved Proposal, Fox, Molly et al., 2024/7 MSID: 5135
Keywords: Reproductive History; Gravidity; Breastfeeding; Alzheimer’S Disease; Neuroimaging; Proteomics; Biomarkers
Related Studies: 103, 183, 233, 244, 712, W64

Postmenopausal hormone therapy and cognitive outcomes: the Women’s Health Initiative Memory Study

Laura Coker et al., 2009/11 PubMed #19932751 MSID: 883
This review discusses major findings from the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study (WHIMS). WHIMS reported hormone therapy (HT)--conjugated equine estrogen (CEE) with or without medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA)--increased the risk for dementia (HR 1.76 [95% CI, 1.19-2.60]; P=0.005) and global cognitive decline, with a mean decrement relative to placebo of 0.21 points on the Modified Mini Mental State Examination (3MS) (P=0.006) in women age 65 and older. A subset of WHIMS participants joined ...
Keywords: Hormone Therapy; Cognition; Brain Mri; Cerebrovascular Disease
Related Studies: 39, 183

Postmenopausal hormone therapy and regional brain volumes: The WHIMS-MRI Study

Susan Resnick et al., 2009/1 PubMed #19139364 MSID: 626
To determine whether menopausal hormone therapy (HT) affects regional brain volumes, including hippocampal and frontal regions.Brain MRI scans were obtained in a subset of 1,403 women aged 71-89 years who participated in the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study (WHIMS). WHIMS was an ancillary study to the Women's Health Initiative, which consisted of two randomized, placebo-controlled trials: 0.625 mg conjugated equine estrogens (CEE) with or without 2.5 mg medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) in...
Keywords: Cognition
Related Studies: 183

Application of machine learning methods to describe the effects of conjugated equine estrogens therapy on region-specific brain volumes

Ramon Casanova et al., 2011/2 PubMed #21292420 MSID: 1047
Use of conjugated equine estrogens (CEE) has been linked to smaller regional brain volumes in women aged =65 years; however, it is unknown whether this results in a broad-based characteristic pattern of effects. Structural magnetic resonance imaging was used to assess regional volumes of normal tissue and ischemic lesions among 513 women who had been enrolled in a randomized clinical trial of CEE therapy for an average of 6.6 years, beginning at ages 65-80 years. A multivariate pattern analysis,...
Keywords: Regional Brain Volumes; Hormone Therapy
Related Studies: 183

Depressive symptoms, brain volumes and subclinical cerebrovascular disease in postmenopausal women: the Women's Health Initiative MRI Study

Joseph Goveas et al., 2011/2 PubMed #21349587 MSID: 979
Late-life depressive symptoms (DS) increase the risk of incident mild cognitive impairment and probable dementia in the elderly. Our objectives were to examine the relationship between elevated DS and regional brain volumes including frontal lobe subregions, hippocampus and amygdala, and to determine whether elevated DS were associated with increased subclinical cerebrovascular disease in postmenopausal women.DS were assessed an average of 8years prior to structural brain MRI in 1372 women. The ...
Keywords: Depression; Cerebrovascular Disease; Regional Brain Volumes; Mri
Related Studies: 183

Higher RBC EPA + DHA corresponds with larger total brain and hippocampal volumes: WHIMS-MRI Study

James Pottala et al., 2014/2 PubMed #24453077 MSID: 1058
To test whether red blood cell (RBC) levels of marine omega-3 fatty acids measured in the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study were related to MRI brain volumes measured 8 years later.RBC eicosapentaenoic acid (EPA), docosahexaenoic acid (DHA), and MRI brain volumes were assessed in 1,111 postmenopausal women from the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study. The endpoints were total brain volume and anatomical regions. Linear mixed models included multiple imputations of fatty acids and were ad...
Keywords: Docosahexaenoic Acid; Omega-3 Index; Brain Volumes; Anatomical Regions; Alzheimer’S Disease; Multiple Imputations
Related Studies: 183, BA19

The influence of social support on cognitive health in older women: a Women's Health Initiative Study

Georgina Moreno et al., 2021/7 PubMed #34252006 MSID: 1267
Social support is associated prospectively with cognitive decline and dementia among the elderly; however, little is known about the impact of social support on healthy neurological aging. The current study investigates whether perceived social support has an influence on neurological health among a large sample of healthy postmenopausal women. Social support and neuropsychological outcomes were measured annually for six years through the Women's Health Initiative Study of Cognitive Aging. In p...
Keywords: Social Environment; Social Support; Social Integration; Aging; Cognition; Neuropsychology; Structural Mri; Brain Volumes
Related Studies: 39, 103, 183

Postmenopausal hormone therapy and subclinical cerebrovascular disease: The WHIMS-MRI Study

Laura Coker et al., 2009/1 PubMed #19139363 MSID: 625
The Women's Health Initiative Memory Study (WHIMS) hormone therapy (HT) trials reported that conjugated equine estrogen (CEE) with or without medroxyprogesterone acetate (MPA) increases risk for all-cause dementia and global cognitive decline. WHIMS MRI measured subclinical cerebrovascular disease as a possible mechanism to explain cognitive decline reported in WHIMS.We contacted 2,345 women at 14 WHIMS sites; scans were completed on 1,424 (61%) and 1,403 were accepted for analysis. The primary ...
Keywords: Hormone Therapy; Cerebrovascular Disease; Cognition
Related Studies: 183

Women’s Health Initiative Memory Study (WHIMS) Program: Emerging findings

Publication, Espeland, Mark et al., 2008/2 MSID: 727
Keywords: None Provided
Related Studies: 39, 183

A uniform approach to modeling risk factors relationships for ischemic lesion prevalence and extent: The Women’s Health Initiative Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study (WHIMS-MRI)

Janet Tooze et al., 2009/11 PubMed #19940514 MSID: 680
Both the prevalence and extent of brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) abnormalities are related to risk factors for dementia. Typically these associations have been explored separately, but an integrated modeling approach would allow the separate relationships to be consistently described and contrasted.Region-specific measures of ischemic lesion volumes were obtained from standardized brain MRI from 1,403 women enrolled in the Women's Health Initiative hormone therapy trials. Mixed-effects m...
Keywords: Statistical Methods
Related Studies: 183

Enrollment in a brain magnetic resonance study: Results from the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study (WHIMS-MRI)

Sarah Gaussoin et al., 2007/5 PubMed #17434074 MSID: 542
The rates of enrollment of volunteers for brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies vary by demographic and clinical characteristics. We use data from a large MRI study to identify factors associated with differential enrollment and to examine potential biases this may produce in study results.Results from recruitment of 1,431 women into the MRI substudy of the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study (WHIMS-MRI) are described. A sensitivity analysis was conducted to estimate the degree of bi...
Keywords: Recruitment; Consent
Related Studies: 183

Relationship of hypertension, blood pressure, and blood pressure control with white matter abnormalities in the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study (WHIMS)—MRI Trial

Lewis Kuller et al., 2009/12 PubMed #20433539 MSID: 696
This paper evaluates the relationship of blood pressure (BP) levels at Women's Health Initiative (WHI) baseline, treatment of hypertension, and white matter abnormalities among women in conjugated equine estrogen (CEE) and medroxyprogesterone acetate and CEE-alone arms. The WHI Memory Study-Magnetic Resonance Imaging (WHIMS-MRI) trial scanned 1424 participants. BP levels at baseline were significantly positively related to abnormal white matter lesion (WML) volumes. Participants treated for hype...
Keywords: None Provided
Related Studies: 183

Brain volumes, cognitive impairment, and conjugated equine estrogens

Mark Espeland et al., 2009/9 PubMed #19729392 MSID: 794
Postmenopausal conjugated equine estrogens (CEE) therapies increase the risk of cognitive impairment in women aged 65 years or older and are associated with smaller regional brain volumes; however, the link between these two phenomena has not been established.Standardized magnetic resonance imaging was performed on 1,403 women, 1-4 years after they had participated in randomized placebo-controlled clinical trials of CEE-based therapies. Women included in this report were aged 65-80 years and fre...
Keywords: Cognition
Related Studies: 183

Influence of type 2 diabetes on brain volumes and changes in brain volumes: Results from the Women’s Health Initiative Magnetic Resonance Imaging Studies

Mark Espeland et al., 2012/8 PubMed #22933440 MSID: 1518
To study how type 2 diabetes adversely affects brain volumes, changes in volume, and cognitive function.Regional brain volumes and ischemic lesion volumes in 1,366 women, aged 72-89 years, were measured with structural brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Repeat scans were collected an average of 4.7 years later in 698 women. Cross-sectional differences and changes with time between women with and without diabetes were compared. Relationships that cognitive function test scores had with these...
Keywords: Brain Mri And Diabetes
Related Studies: 183

Educational attainment, MRI changes, and cognitive function in older postmenopausal women from the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study

Stephen Rapp et al., 2013/2 PubMed #24552037 MSID: 683
The relationship between neuropathology and clinically manifested functional and cognitive deficits is complex. Clinical observations of individuals with greater neuropathology who function better than some individuals with less neuropathology are common and puzzling. Educational attainment, a proxy for ""cognitive reserve,"" may help to explain this apparent contradiction. The objective of this study is to determine if educational attainment is correlated with cognitive decline, brain lesion vo...
Keywords: Cognition; Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Aging; And Women’S Health
Related Studies: 39, 183

Adherence to a MIND-like dietary pattern, long-term exposure to fine particulate matter air pollution, and MRI-based measures of brain volume: The Women's Health Initiative Memory Study-MRI

Cheng Chen et al., 2021/12 PubMed #34939828 MSID: 1426
Background: Previous studies suggest that certain dietary patterns and constituents may be beneficial to brain health. Airborne exposures to fine particulate matter [particulate matter with aerodynamic diameter ≤ 2.5 μ m ( PM 2.5 )] are neurotoxic, but the combined effects of dietary patterns and PM 2.5 have not been investigated. Objectives: We examined whether previously reported association between PM 2.5 exposure and lower white matter volume (WMV) differed between women whose usual diet dur...
Keywords: Cognition Disorders; Dementia; Air Pollution; Geographic Locations; Diet; Nutrition
Related Studies: 39, 183, 252

Objectively defined subtle cognitive decline (OBJ-SCD) and associations with air pollution

Approved Proposal, Petkus, Andrew J. et al., 2022/12 MSID: 4843
Keywords: Air Pollution; Cognitive Aging; Structural Magnetic Resonance Imaging; Mild Cognitive Impairment; And Alzheimer’S Disease And Related Dementia
Related Studies: 39, 103, 183, 244, 252

Kidney Function and Cognitive Outcomes in Older Women with CKD: The Women's Health Initiative Memory Study (WHIMS)

Approved Proposal, Oh , Ester et al., 2024/4 MSID: 5104
Keywords: Cognitive Outcomes; Probable Dementia; Mild Cognitive Impairment; Chronic Kidney Disease.
Related Studies: 39, 183

The direct and indirect role of reproductive aging for racial disparities in adjudicated cognitive impairment

Approved Proposal, Reeves, Alexis et al., 2022/12 MSID: 4821
Keywords: Race; Racism; Menopause; Dementia; Cognitive Aging; Reproductive Aging; Hysterectomy/Oophorectomy
Related Studies: 39, 183, 262, 548

Mega-analysis of brain structural covariance, genetics, and clinical phenotypes

Approved Proposal, Wen, Junhao et al., 2022/3 MSID: 4674
Related Studies: 183

Plasma proteins related to inflammatory diet predict future cognitive impairment

Michael Duggan et al., 2023/2 PubMed #36737481 MSID: 4396
Dysregulation of the immune system and dietary patterns that increase inflammation can increase the risk for cognitive decline, but the mechanisms by which inflammatory nutritional habits may affect the development of cognitive impairment in aging are not well understood. To determine whether plasma proteins linked to inflammatory diet predict future cognitive impairment, we applied high-throughput proteomic assays to plasma samples from a subset (n = 1528) of Women's Health Initiative Memory St...
Keywords: Inflammation; Dementia; Alzheimer’S Disease; Proteomics; Diet
Related Studies: 39, 103, 183, 233, 244, 262, 615

Association between blood pressure levels and cognitive impairment in older women: a prospective analysis of the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study

Longjian Liu et al., 2022/1 PubMed #35112096 MSID: 4161
Background: Whether blood pressure (BP), and at what level of controlled BP, reduces risk of cognitive impairment remains uncertain. We investigated the association of BP and hypertension treatment status with mild cognitive impairment and dementia in older women. Methods: We prospectively analysed a sample of 7207 community-dwelling women aged 65-79 years participating in the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study (WHIMS). Participants were recruited between May 28, 1996, and Dec 13, 1999, at 3...
Keywords: Blood Pressure; Cognitive Function; Dementia
Related Studies: 39, 183, 233, 244

Chronic use of aspirin and total white matter lesion volume: Results from the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study of Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study

Andrea Holcombe et al., 2017/5 PubMed #28551293 MSID: 2582
OBJECTIVE: To investigate the relationship between aspirin and subclinical cerebrovascular heath, we evaluated the effect of chronic aspirin use on white matter lesions (WML) volume among women. METHODS: Chronic aspirin use was assessed in 1365 women who participated in the Women's Health Initiative Memory Study of Magnetic Resonance Imaging. Differences in WML volumes between aspirin users and nonusers were assessed with linear mixed models. A number of secondary analyses were performed, includ...
Keywords: Epidemiology; Nsaid; Antiplatelet; Aspirin; Cognition
Related Studies: 183

Using high-dimensional machine learning methods to estimate an anatomical risk factor for Alzheimer's disease across imaging databases

Ramon Casanova et al., 2018/8 PubMed #30130645 MSID: 3258
INTRODUCTION: The main goal of this work is to investigate the feasibility of estimating an anatomical index that can be used as an Alzheimer's disease (AD) risk factor in the Women's Health Initiative Magnetic Resonance Imaging Study (WHIMS-MRI) using MRI data from the Alzheimer's Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI), a well-characterized imaging database of AD patients and cognitively normal subjects. We called this index AD Pattern Similarity (AD-PS) scores. To demonstrate the construct val...
Keywords: Brain Aging; Alzheimer’S Disease; Mri
Related Studies: 183

An association between large optic nerve cupping and cognitive function

Thasarat S. Vajaranant et al., 2019/6 PubMed #31163134 MSID: 3085
PURPOSE: To determine if a larger cup-disc ratio is associated with poor cognitive function in postmenopausal women without glaucoma or ocular hypertension. METHODS: We used data from the Women's Health Initiative (WHI), originally designed to test effects of hormone therapy (HT) on various health outcomes. Large cup-disc ratio was defined as greater than 0.6 in either eye based on stereoscopic optic nerve photographs. Global cognitive function was assessed annually by Modified Mini-Mental State...
Keywords: Glaucoma; Aging; Brain; Blindness
Related Studies: 39, 62, 183

Effects of hormone therapy on brain volumes changes of postmenopausal women revealed by optimally-discriminative voxel-based morphometry

Tianhao Zhang et al., 2016/3 PubMed #26974440 MSID: 2544
BACKGROUNDS: The Women's Health Initiative Memory Study Magnetic Resonance Imaging (WHIMS-MRI) provides an opportunity to evaluate how menopausal hormone therapy (HT) affects the structure of older women's brains. Our earlier work based on region of interest (ROI) analysis demonstrated potential structural changes underlying adverse effects of HT on cognition. However, the ROI-based analysis is limited in statistical power and precision, and cannot provide fine-grained mapping of whole-brain cha...
Keywords: Hormone Therapy; Brain Volumes; Postmenopausal
Related Studies: 183