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Persistence of Neuropsychiatric Symptoms and Dementia Prognostication: A Comparison of Three Operational Definitions of Mild Behavioral Impairment

Authors :
Dylan X. Guan
Eric E. Smith
G. Bruce Pike
Zahinoor Ismail
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory, 2023.

Abstract

INTRODUCTIONThis study compares three operational definitions of mild behavioral impairment (MBI) in the context of MBI prevalence estimates and dementia risk modeling.METHODSParticipants were dementia-free older adults (n=13701) from the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center. Operational definitions of MBI were generated based on neuropsychiatric symptoms at one (OV), two-consecutive (TCV), or >2/3 (TTV) of dementia-free study visits. Definitions were compared in prevalence and in Cox regressions using MBI to predict incident dementia.RESULTSOV MBI was the most prevalent (54.4%), followed by TCV (32.3%) and TTV (26.7%) MBI. However, OV MBI had the lowest rate of incident dementia (HR=2.54, 95%CI: 2.33–2.78) and generated poorer model metrics than TCV MBI (HR=4.06, 95%CI: 3.74–4.40) and TTV MBI (HR=5.77, 95%CI: 5.32–6.26).DISCUSSIONCase ascertainment with longer timeframe MBI operational definitions may more accurately define groups at risk of dementia in datasets lacking tools designed to detect MBI.HIGHLIGHTSMild behavioral impairment (MBI) can identify older adults at risk of dementia.Neuropsychiatric symptom (NPS) assessment tools can be proxy measures for MBI.Hazard for dementia was highest for MBI defined by NPS presence at >2/3 of visits.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........81d5dc04828a4deec82cce8947d7a0c2
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1101/2023.04.08.23287454