NFL players have higher rates of neurodegenerative disease-caused mortality
· News-MedicalMass General Brigham, Boston University, and the Concussion & CTE Foundation cohort study of nearly 20,000 NFL players reveals that players are dying of dementia and Parkinson's disease at much higher rates than the general population.
A new study from Mass General Brigham, Boston University, and the Concussion & CTE Foundation found that National Football League (NFL) players had higher rates of neurodegenerative disease-caused mortality than the general population. A cohort study of nearly 20,000 NFL players revealed that, while players had lower mortality on average compared to national rates, they were four times more likely to experience neurodegenerative mortality. Results are published in eClinicalMedicine.
Daniel Daneshvar, MD, PhD, co-senior author, Chair of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation at Mass General Brigham and Harvard Medical School and director of the HealthSpan LabThis is the clearest population-level evidence we have ever had that NFL players are dying due to neurodegenerative disease at real and measurably higher rates. This study demonstrates that, when looking at athletes who have played in an NFL game, including nearly 20,000 players, across every official cause of death, the result is the same: NFL players are dying of dementia and Parkinson's disease three to four times more often than they should."
Neurodegenerative diseases, like dementia, ALS, or Parkinson's, affect tens of millions of people worldwide. Typically, age is the biggest risk factor for developing neurodegenerative diseases, but studies have revealed individuals with repetitive head impact exposure-like NFL players-also have higher incidence of the diseases. In the biggest retrospective cohort study to date, researchers looked at health records of 19,824 NFL players who competed between 1960 and 2019 to determine exactly how much higher.
They found that players had lower all-cause mortality but nearly four-times higher neurodegenerative mortality, including all-cause dementia (3.8-times higher) and Parkinson's (3.88-times higher). When accounting for other known risk factors, neurodegenerative mortality was still three times higher for players compared to the general population.
The increase was even more significant for younger NFL players. Those who died before age 60 had more than 12-fold increased rates of neurodegenerative death compared to the general population. Players with longer careers (5+ seasons) had nearly double the risk of neurodegenerative death compared to those with shorter careers (1–4 seasons), reinforcing a dose-response relationship between years of play and brain disease risk identified in studies of chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE).
The study shows that NFL players had significantly lower overall mortality than the general population despite their dramatically elevated neurodegenerative disease rates. NFL players were less likely to die from cancer, cardiovascular disease, and suicide - underscoring that this is a population that is generally healthier yet still dying of brain disease at higher rates.
The study also introduces a new concept called the Selection Through Athletic Resilience Survivor (STARS) effect to explain why former NFL players tend to live longer overall. The STARS effect suggests that the same genetic, environmental, medical, and behavioral characteristics that enable individuals to become professional athletes-such as exceptional physical and cognitive performance, resilience, self-discipline, as well as lower rates of smoking and serious early illnesses and injuries-also contribute to longer overall survival. Higher educational attainment and better access to medical care may further offset the effects of other health conditions later in life. Those advantages make the elevated rates of neurodegenerative disease even more striking because NFL players would otherwise be expected to have lower rates of brain disease than the general population due to these health advantages.
Taken together, the STARS effect suggests that the fourfold increase in neurodegenerative disease found in NFL players may actually underrepresent the true relationship between playing in the NFL and neurodegenerative disease, as NFL players would otherwise be expected to have lower rates of brain disease, in the same way that they have lower rates of cancer and cardiovascular disease. In fact, neurodegenerative disease deaths were highest in athletes who tend to have the fewest comorbidities; linemen, who tend to be heavier, with higher body mass index, and related comorbidities including sleep apnea, had half the dementia mortality compared to non-linemen.
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