Gabapentin and Dementia Risk
Based on the Medscape article about gabapentin and dementia risk, sum up.
Gabapentin and Dementia Risk: New Research Findings
Study Overview
• Anticonvulsant gabapentin linked to increased cognitive decline risk • Led by Nafis Eghrari, Case Western Reserve University • Published in Regional Anesthesia & Pain Management (July 2024) • Used TriNetX national database of patient records
Study Design
• 26,416 gabapentin users matched with equal number of non-users • Propensity-score matched cohort study • Focus on chronic low back pain patients • 10-year follow-up period
Key Findings – Overall Risk
• 29% higher risk of developing dementia • 85% higher risk of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) • Results adjusted for demographics, comorbidities, and other pain medications
Age-Specific Results
Elderly (≥65 years): • 28% increased dementia risk (RR 1.28) • 53% increased MCI risk (RR 1.53)
Non-elderly (18-64 years): • 110% increased dementia risk (RR 2.10) • 150% increased MCI risk (RR 2.50)
Detailed Age Breakdown
• 18-34 years: No significant difference • 35-49 years: 144% higher dementia risk, 250% higher MCI risk • 50-64 years: 128% higher dementia risk, 122% higher MCI risk
Dose-Response Relationship
• Higher risk with frequent prescriptions • 12+ prescriptions: 40% higher dementia risk, 65% higher MCI risk • Compared to 3-11 prescriptions
Clinical Context
• Gabapentin increasingly used as opioid alternative • Low abuse potential makes it attractive for chronic pain • Association with cognitive decline previously unclear
Expert Concerns & Limitations
• Confounding factors: Physical activity levels not examined • Reverse causality: Pain patients may be less active (dementia risk factor) • Study limitations: No control for treatment length or dosage • Mixed evidence: Other recent studies failed to find similar links
Expert Quotes
• “Cannot prove that gabapentin was the cause” – Tara Spires-Jones • “The jury is out on whether gabapentin causes dementia” – Ian Maidment • Findings may be “artefactual” – Sir John Hardy
Clinical Implications
• Need for “close monitoring of adult patients prescribed gabapentin” • Foundation for further causal research needed • Balanced risk-benefit assessment required • Consider alternative pain management strategies
Research Recommendations
• Long-term controlled studies needed • Dose and duration effects require investigation • Physical activity levels should be controlled • Age-specific guidelines may be necessary




