A new frontier in cancer risk: Screen time and dementia in the socially isolated
A large-scale prospective cohort study from the UK Biobank reveals a complex link between leisure-time technology use and dementia risk in older adults with limited social or leisure activities. Following nearly 90,000 dementia-free, socially inactive adults for over 12 years, researchers found that moderate computer use (≤2.4 hours/day) was associated with an 12% lower risk of all-cause dementia, suggesting a potential protective cognitive effect. However, heavier computer use increased the risk by 19%, and television viewing beyond 2 hours per day was linked to a 17% higher risk, with a linear increase observed for vascular dementia. The study highlights significant effect modifiers, finding that heavy computer use was particularly harmful for individuals with the high-risk APOE-ε4 genetic profile, and higher television viewing posed a greater risk for adults under 65.
Study Significance: This research introduces a critical, modifiable lifestyle factor into the cancer survivorship and epidemiology conversation, as dementia is a major comorbidity affecting long-term outcomes and quality of life for cancer survivors. For oncologists and researchers focused on precision oncology and survivorship, these findings underscore the need to integrate assessments of social activity and screen-based leisure into holistic patient care plans. It suggests that behavioral interventions aimed at optimizing technology use could be a strategic component in mitigating non-cancer morbidity and improving overall survivorship trajectories.
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