Brodaty Henry, Aerts Liesbeth, Crawford John D, Heffernan Megan, Kochan Nicole A, Reppermund Simone, Kang Kristan, Maston Kate, Draper Brian, Trollor Julian N, Sachdev Perminder S
Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing, School of Psychiatry, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia; Dementia Collaborative Research Centre-Assessment and Better Care, School of Psychiatry, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia; Academic Department for Old Age Psychiatry, Prince of Wales Hospital, Randwick, Australia.
Dementia Collaborative Research Centre-Assessment and Better Care, School of Psychiatry, University of New South Wales, Sydney, Australia.
Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2017 May;25(5):485-497. doi: 10.1016/j.jagp.2016.12.012. Epub 2016 Dec 23.
Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is considered an intermediate stage between normal aging and dementia. It is diagnosed in the presence of subjective cognitive decline and objective cognitive impairment without significant functional impairment, although there are no standard operationalizations for each of these criteria. The objective of this study is to determine which operationalization of the MCI criteria is most accurate at predicting dementia.
Six-year longitudinal study, part of the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study.
Community-based.
873 community-dwelling dementia-free adults between 70 and 90 years of age. Persons from a non-English speaking background were excluded.
Seven different operationalizations for subjective cognitive decline and eight measures of objective cognitive impairment (resulting in 56 different MCI operational algorithms) were applied. The accuracy of each algorithm to predict progression to dementia over 6 years was examined for 618 individuals.
Baseline MCI prevalence varied between 0.4% and 30.2% and dementia conversion between 15.9% and 61.9% across different algorithms. The predictive accuracy for progression to dementia was poor. The highest accuracy was achieved based on objective cognitive impairment alone. Inclusion of subjective cognitive decline or mild functional impairment did not improve dementia prediction accuracy.
Not MCI, but objective cognitive impairment alone, is the best predictor for progression to dementia in a community sample. Nevertheless, clinical assessment procedures need to be refined to improve the identification of pre-dementia individuals.
轻度认知障碍(MCI)被认为是正常衰老与痴呆之间的中间阶段。尽管这些标准尚无标准的操作定义,但在存在主观认知衰退和客观认知损害且无明显功能损害的情况下可作出诊断。本研究的目的是确定MCI标准的哪种操作定义在预测痴呆方面最为准确。
为期六年的纵向研究,是悉尼记忆与衰老研究的一部分。
基于社区。
873名年龄在70至90岁之间、居住在社区且无痴呆的成年人。排除非英语背景的人。
应用了七种不同的主观认知衰退操作定义和八项客观认知损害测量方法(得出56种不同的MCI操作算法)。对618名个体检查了每种算法预测6年内发展为痴呆的准确性。
在不同算法中,基线MCI患病率在0.4%至30.2%之间,痴呆转化率在15.9%至61.9%之间。发展为痴呆的预测准确性较差。仅基于客观认知损害时准确性最高。纳入主观认知衰退或轻度功能损害并未提高痴呆预测准确性。
在社区样本中,不是MCI,而是仅客观认知损害是发展为痴呆的最佳预测指标。然而,临床评估程序需要完善,以改善对痴呆前期个体的识别。