Department of Internal Medicine and Cognitive Health Services Research Program, University of Michigan (U-M), Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
Department of Neurology and Stroke Program, U-M, Ann Arbor, MI, USA.
J Gen Intern Med. 2022 Jun;37(8):1925-1934. doi: 10.1007/s11606-021-06839-w. Epub 2021 May 7.
Older patients (65+) with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) receive less guideline-concordant care for cardiovascular disease (CVD) and other conditions than patients with normal cognition (NC). One potential explanation is that patients with MCI want less treatment than patients with NC; however, the treatment preferences of patients with MCI have not been studied.
To determine whether patients with MCI have different treatment preferences than patients with NC.
Cross-sectional survey conducted at two academic medical centers from February to December 2019 PARTICIPANTS: Dyads of older outpatients with MCI and NC and patient-designated surrogates.
The modified Life-Support Preferences-Predictions Questionnaire score measured patients' preferences for life-sustaining treatment decisions in six health scenarios including stroke and acute myocardial infarction (range, 0-24 treatments rejected with greater scores indicating lower desire for treatment).
The survey response rate was 73.4%. Of 136 recruited dyads, 127 (93.4%) completed the survey (66 MCI and 61 NC). The median number of life-sustaining treatments rejected across health scenarios did not differ significantly between patients with MCI and patients with NC (4.5 vs 6.0; P=0.55). Most patients with MCI (80%) and NC (80%) desired life-sustaining treatments in their current health (P=0.99). After adjusting for patient and surrogate factors, the difference in mean counts of rejected treatments between patients with MCI and patients with NC was not statistically significant (adjusted ratio, 1.08, 95% CI, 0.80-1.44; P=0.63).
We did not find evidence that patients with MCI want less treatment than patients with NC. These findings suggest that other provider and system factors might contribute to patients with MCI getting less guideline-concordant care.
与认知正常(NC)的患者相比,患有轻度认知障碍(MCI)的老年患者(65 岁以上)接受的心血管疾病(CVD)和其他疾病的治疗方案与指南的符合程度较低。一个潜在的解释是,MCI 患者比 NC 患者的治疗意愿更低;然而,MCI 患者的治疗偏好尚未得到研究。
确定 MCI 患者的治疗偏好是否与 NC 患者不同。
2019 年 2 月至 12 月在两个学术医疗中心进行的横断面调查
MCI 和 NC 的老年门诊患者及其指定的患者代理人组成的对子。
改良生命支持偏好预测问卷(Life-Support Preferences-Predictions Questionnaire)得分,用于测量患者在六种健康场景下对维持生命治疗决策的偏好,包括中风和急性心肌梗死(范围为 0-24 种治疗方案,得分越高表示对治疗的渴望越低)。
调查响应率为 73.4%。在招募的 136 对患者中,有 127 对(93.4%)完成了调查(66 对 MCI,61 对 NC)。在六种健康场景下,MCI 患者和 NC 患者拒绝的维持生命治疗方案的中位数没有显著差异(4.5 与 6.0;P=0.55)。大多数 MCI 患者(80%)和 NC 患者(80%)在当前健康状况下希望接受维持生命的治疗(P=0.99)。在校正患者和代理人因素后,MCI 患者和 NC 患者之间拒绝治疗方案的平均数量差异无统计学意义(调整后的比值,1.08,95%CI,0.80-1.44;P=0.63)。
我们没有发现证据表明 MCI 患者的治疗意愿低于 NC 患者。这些发现表明,其他提供者和系统因素可能导致 MCI 患者接受的治疗方案与指南的符合程度较低。