Mamayson Raymund F, Lacanaria Mary Grace C
Saint Louis University, Baguio City, Benguet, Philippines.
Acta Med Philipp. 2024 Apr 15;58(6):14-23. doi: 10.47895/amp.vi0.7162. eCollection 2024.
The number of individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), or those people without dementia who are experiencing age-related cognitive decline, has increased in recent years. Conveniently, several interventions to delay cognitive decline exist, where cognitively stimulating activities (CSA) have been receiving too much attention. However, its beneficial effects have not been well established among older people with MCI due to conflicting findings.
This study aimed to assess and summarize the available evidence on the effects of CSA on the overall cognitive functioning of older people with MCI. Specifically, it sought to answer the PICO question, "In older people with MCI, does engagement in cognitively stimulating activities improve cognitive function?"
A systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials examining the effects of CSA on older people with MCI were conducted. Three studies met the inclusion criteria from the 1,328 records from BioMed Central, CINAHL, Cochrane Library, Health Source: Nursing/Academic Edition, MEDLINE, and PubMed databases and 156 articles from WorldCat, DSpace Saint Louis University, and Google Scholar databases and catalogs. Effect size values were inspected using the random-effects model. Data were summarized as standardized mean difference (SMD) with corresponding 95% confidence intervals in the forest plot.
This meta-analysis which compared studies that employed similar methodologies, found that CSA has a significant, large effect in improving cognitive functioning among older people with MCI, evidenced by an SMD of 0.798 (95% CI = 0.510-1.085, = 0.001). While its superiority over other interventions that improve cognitive function was not observed in this study, it was still found that using CSA was helpful in terms of its cost-effectiveness. Also, heterogeneity across studies was non-significant (Cochran's Q = 0.151, df = 2, = 0.927, I = 0.00%). These results mean that clinical heterogeneity was absent even though a diverse range of CSA was employed. Additionally, methodological diversity was not present since there were no variations in the study design and minimal variability in the risk of bias assessment.
Overall, it is acknowledged that CSA are effective and practical, inexpensive, non-pharmacologic cognitive training approaches to delay cognitive decline among older people with MCI. However, interpreting this study's significant, large effect, and non-significant heterogeneity warrants caution.
近年来,轻度认知障碍(MCI)患者的数量有所增加,MCI指无痴呆症但出现与年龄相关的认知衰退的人群。方便的是,存在几种延缓认知衰退的干预措施,其中认知刺激活动(CSA)受到了过多关注。然而,由于研究结果相互矛盾,其在患有MCI的老年人中的有益效果尚未得到充分证实。
本研究旨在评估和总结关于CSA对患有MCI的老年人整体认知功能影响的现有证据。具体而言,它试图回答PICO问题:“在患有MCI的老年人中,参与认知刺激活动是否能改善认知功能?”
对研究CSA对患有MCI的老年人影响的随机对照试验进行了系统综述和荟萃分析。从生物医学中心、护理及健康照护领域数据库(CINAHL)、考克兰图书馆、健康资源:护理/学术版、医学索引(MEDLINE)和PubMed数据库的1328条记录以及世界图书馆、圣路易斯大学数字空间和谷歌学术数据库及目录中的156篇文章中,有三项研究符合纳入标准。使用随机效应模型检查效应量值。数据在森林图中总结为标准化平均差(SMD)及相应的95%置信区间。
这项比较采用类似方法的研究的荟萃分析发现,CSA对改善患有MCI的老年人的认知功能有显著的、较大的效果,标准化平均差为0.798(95%置信区间 = 0.510 - 1.085,P = 0.001)证明了这一点。虽然本研究未观察到其优于其他改善认知功能的干预措施,但仍发现使用CSA在成本效益方面是有帮助的。此外,各研究间的异质性不显著( Cochr an Q = 0.151,自由度 = 2,P = 0.927,I² = 0.00%)。这些结果意味着,即使采用了多种不同的CSA,临床异质性也不存在。此外,由于研究设计没有差异且偏倚风险评估的变异性最小,所以方法学多样性也不存在。
总体而言,人们承认CSA是有效、实用、廉价的非药物认知训练方法,可延缓患有MCI的老年人的认知衰退。然而,对本研究的显著、较大效果和不显著的异质性进行解读时需谨慎。