An NIA-funded research team led by Drs. Laura Baker and Mark Espeland at Wake Forest University School of Medicine launched a study aimed at filling the gaps in our understanding of multivitamins and flavanols — compounds found in high levels in unprocessed cocoa — and their effects on cognition.
Normal brain function requires various vitamins, minerals, and other nutrients. Deficiencies in these nutrients may increase the risk for cognitive decline and dementia with age. Yet clinical trials of individual nutrients’ effects on cognition have yielded mixed results. Prior research suggests that flavanols in particular — compounds found in high levels in unprocessed cocoa — might benefit cognition.
Much of that research on flavanols was based on observational studies, rather than clinical trials. And previously, the effects of a multivitamin on cognition in older adults had been studied only in a few short clinical trials (less than 12 months) and a single longer trial that included older male physicians.
The Wake Forest University School of Medicine study examined more than 2,200 participants, ages 65 and older, who enrolled in the study from August 2016 to August 2017. The participants’ average age was 73.
Participants were given a cocoa extract supplement and/or a multivitamin-mineral supplement daily for three years, or an inactive placebo for comparison. They completed a battery of cognitive tests over the phone at the beginning of the study and once a year afterward.
The researchers evaluated participants on global cognition (a wide range of cognitive measures), memory, and executive function (attention, planning, and organization). Results appeared in the journal Alzheimer’s & Dementia on Sept. 14, 2022.
The team found no difference in global cognition (a wide range of cognitive behaviors) between those who took cocoa extract and those who did not. But participants taking the multivitamin had higher global cognition scores than those who didn’t.
The improvement was most pronounced in those with a history of cardiovascular disease.
Significant improvements with daily multivitamin use were also seen in memory and executive function.
The results suggest that a safe and affordable daily multivitamin-mineral supplement might improve cognition in older adults or protect cognitive health with age. However, researchers caution that the results, while promising, are still preliminary.
“It’s too early to recommend daily multivitamin supplementation to prevent cognitive decline,” Baker says. “While these preliminary findings are promising, additional research is needed in a larger and more diverse group of people. Also, we still have work to do to better understand why the multivitamin might benefit cognition in older adults.”