Beishon Lucy C, Batterham Angus P, Quinn Terry J, Nelson Christopher P, Panerai Ronney B, Robinson Thompson, Haunton Victoria J
University of Leicester, Department of Cardiovascular Sciences, Clinical Sciences Building, Leicester Royal Infirmary, Leicester, UK, LE2 7LX.
University of Leicester, Leicester Medical School, Maurice Shock Building, University Road, Leicester, UK, LE1 7RH.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2019 Dec 17;12(12):CD013282. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD013282.pub2.
The number of new cases of dementia is projected to rise significantly over the next decade. Thus, there is a pressing need for accurate tools to detect cognitive impairment in routine clinical practice. The Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination III (ACE-III), and the mini-ACE are brief, bedside cognitive screens that have previously reported good sensitivity and specificity. The quality and quantity of this evidence has not, however, been robustly investigated.
To assess the diagnostic test accuracy of the ACE-III and mini-ACE for the detection of dementia, dementia sub-types, and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) at published thresholds in primary, secondary, and community care settings in patients presenting with, or at high risk of, cognitive decline.
We performed the search for this review on 13 February 2019. We searched MEDLINE (OvidSP), Embase (OvidSP), BIOSIS Previews (ISI Web of Knowledge), Web of Science Core Collection (ISI Web of Knowledge), PsycINFO (OvidSP), and LILACS (BIREME). We applied no language or date restrictions to the electronic searches; and to maximise sensitivity we did not use methodological filters. The search yielded 5655 records, of which 2937 remained after we removed duplicates. We identified a further four articles through PubMed 'related articles'. We found no additional records through reference list citation searching, or grey literature.
Cross-sectional studies investigating the accuracy of the ACE-III or mini-ACE in patients presenting with, or at high risk of, cognitive decline were suitable for inclusion. We excluded case-control, delayed verification and longitudinal studies, and studies which investigated a secondary cause of dementia. We did not restrict studies by language; and we included those with pre-specified thresholds (88 and 82 for the ACE-III, and 21 or 25 for the mini-ACE).
We extracted information on study and participant characteristics and used information on dementia and MCI prevalence, sensitivity, specificity, and sample size to generate 2×2 tables in Review Manager 5. We assessed methodological quality of included studies using the QUADAS-2 tool; and we assessed the quality of study reporting with the STARDdem tool. Due to significant heterogeneity in the included studies and an insufficient number of studies, we did not perform meta-analyses.
This review identified seven studies (1711 participants in total) of cross-sectional design, four examining the accuracy of the ACE-III, and three of the mini-ACE. Overall, the majority of studies were at low or unclear risk of bias and applicability on quality assessment. Studies were at high risk of bias for the index test (n = 4) and reference standard (n = 2). Study reporting was variable across the included studies. No studies investigated dementia sub-types. The ACE-III had variable sensitivity across thresholds and patient populations (range for dementia at 82 and 88: 82% to 97%, n = 2; range for MCI at 88: 75% to 77%, n = 2), but with more variability in specificity (range for dementia: 4% to 77%, n = 2; range for MCI: 89% to 92%, n = 2). Similarly, sensitivity of the mini-ACE was variable (range for dementia at 21 and 25: 70% to 99%, n = 3; range for MCI at 21 and 25: 64% to 95%, n = 3) but with more variability specificity (range for dementia: 32% to 100%, n = 3; range for MCI: 46% to 79%, n = 3). We identified no studies in primary care populations: four studies were conducted in outpatient clinics, one study in an in-patient setting, and in two studies the settings were unclear.
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: There is insufficient information in terms of both quality and quantity to recommend the use of either the ACE-III or mini-ACE for the screening of dementia or MCI in patients presenting with, or at high risk of, cognitive decline. No studies were conducted in a primary care setting so the accuracy of the ACE-III and mini-ACE in this setting are not known. Lower thresholds (82 for the ACE-III, and 21 for the mini-ACE) provide better specificity with acceptable sensitivity and may provide better clinical utility. The ACE-III and mini-ACE should only be used to support the diagnosis as an adjunct to a full clinical assessment. Further research is needed to determine the utility of the ACE-III and mini-ACE for the detection of dementia, dementia sub-types, and MCI. Specifically, the optimal thresholds for detection need to be determined in a variety of settings (primary care, secondary care (inpatient and outpatient), and community services), prevalences, and languages.
预计在未来十年,痴呆症的新发病例数将显著增加。因此,在常规临床实践中迫切需要准确的工具来检测认知障碍。Addenbrooke认知检查第三版(ACE-III)和简易ACE是简短的床边认知筛查工具,此前报告显示其具有良好的敏感性和特异性。然而,这一证据的质量和数量尚未得到充分研究。
评估ACE-III和简易ACE在已发表的阈值下,对认知功能下降或有认知功能下降高风险的患者在初级、二级和社区护理环境中检测痴呆症、痴呆亚型和轻度认知障碍(MCI)的诊断测试准确性。
我们于2019年2月13日进行了本次综述的检索。我们检索了MEDLINE(OvidSP)、Embase(OvidSP)、BIOSIS Previews(ISI Web of Knowledge)、Web of Science核心合集(ISI Web of Knowledge)、PsycINFO(OvidSP)和LILACS(BIREME)。我们对电子检索未设语言或日期限制;为了最大限度提高敏感性,我们未使用方法学过滤器。检索得到5655条记录,去除重复记录后还剩2937条。我们通过PubMed的“相关文章”又识别出4篇文章。通过参考文献列表引用检索或灰色文献未找到其他记录。
调查ACE-III或简易ACE在认知功能下降或有认知功能下降高风险患者中的准确性的横断面研究适合纳入。我们排除了病例对照研究、延迟验证研究和纵向研究,以及调查痴呆症继发原因的研究。我们未对研究语言进行限制;我们纳入了具有预先设定阈值的研究(ACE-III为88和82,简易ACE为21或25)。
我们提取了关于研究和参与者特征的信息,并利用痴呆症和MCI患病率、敏感性、特异性及样本量的信息在Review Manager 5中生成2×2表格。我们使用QUADAS-2工具评估纳入研究的方法学质量;我们使用STARDdem工具评估研究报告的质量。由于纳入研究存在显著异质性且研究数量不足,我们未进行荟萃分析。
本综述确定了7项横断面设计研究(共1711名参与者),4项研究ACE-III的准确性,3项研究简易ACE的准确性。总体而言,大多数研究在质量评估方面存在低或不清楚的偏倚风险和适用性。索引测试(n = 4)和参考标准(n = 2)存在高偏倚风险。纳入研究的报告情况各不相同。没有研究调查痴呆亚型。ACE-III在不同阈值和患者群体中的敏感性各不相同(痴呆症在82和88时的范围:82%至97%,n = 2;MCI在88时的范围:75%至77%,n = 2),但特异性的变异性更大(痴呆症的范围:4%至77%,n = 2;MCI的范围:89%至92%,n = 2)。同样,简易ACE的敏感性也各不相同(痴呆症在21和25时的范围:70%至99%,n = 3;MCI在21和25时的范围:64%至95%,n = 3),但特异性的变异性更大(痴呆症的范围:32%至100%,n = 3;MCI的范围:46%至79%,n = 3)。我们未在初级保健人群中发现相关研究:4项研究在门诊进行,1项研究在住院环境中进行,2项研究的环境不清楚。
在质量和数量方面都没有足够的信息来推荐使用ACE-III或简易ACE对认知功能下降或有认知功能下降高风险的患者进行痴呆症或MCI筛查。没有在初级保健环境中进行的研究,因此ACE-III和简易ACE在该环境中的准确性尚不清楚。较低的阈值(ACE-III为82,简易ACE为21)可提供更好的特异性,同时具有可接受的敏感性,可能具有更好的临床实用性。ACE-III和简易ACE仅应用于辅助全面临床评估以支持诊断。需要进一步研究以确定ACE-III和简易ACE在检测痴呆症、痴呆亚型和MCI方面的效用。具体而言,需要在各种环境(初级保健、二级保健(住院和门诊)及社区服务)、患病率和语言中确定检测的最佳阈值。