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Predictors of nursing home placement in Huntington disease

Authors :
Vicki Hunt
Joseph Jankovic
Michael R. Swenson
Carol Zimmerman
Lauren Seeberger
Carol Pantello
Kathleen Francis
Jeana Jaglin
Eric Siemers
Kenneth Marck
Oksana Suchowersky
Peter Como
Carmen Polanco
Stephanie Newman
Karen Caplan
Daniel S. Sax
Karl Kieburtz
Ira Shoulson
David Olson
Gina Rohs
Walter J. Koroshetz
J. Beach
Juan Sanchez-Ramos
Kim Lane
Elizabeth Leritz
Donald S. Higgins
Vicki L. Wheelock
Frederick J. Marshall
Tetsuo Ashizawa
W.R. Wayne Martin
Naomi Zubin
Charles A. Adler
Dwight J. Stewart
Samantha Pearce
Marie Saint-Hilaire
Jane B. Lane
Constance Orme
M. Sherr
Richard H. Myers
Marguerite Wieler
Elizabeth McCusker
John Caviness
Jennifer Mazurkiewicz
William Weiner
Kristine Wernette
Steven M. Hersch
Catherine Brown
Merit Cudkowicz
Greg Rudolf
M. Nance
Andrew Feigin
Phillipa Hedges
Adam Rosenblatt
Francis O. Walker
Cindy Lied
Jackie Gray
Elan D. Louis
Jang Ho John Cha
Alexander P. Auchus
Randi Jones
Michael R. Hayden
Kathleen M. Shannon
Hongwei Zhao
Charlyne Hickey
Carol Moskowitz
John B. Penney
Lynn A. Raymond
J. Timothy Greenamyre
Ted M. Dawson
Neal R. Swerdlow
Robert Hauscr
Janet S. Cellar
Elise Kayson
Sandra Russell
Leon S. Dure
Irenita Gardiner
David A. Abwender
Nanette Mercado
Ronald Trent
Audrey Walker
Nancy Pearson
Alicia Facca
Paula Sexton
Mark Guttman
Karen Marder
Teresa Tempkin
Kerry Duncan
Jill Burke-Holder
Gustavo Rey
Anne B. Young
Carson Reider
Roger L. Albin
Jane S. Paulsen
Cindy Hunter
Anders Lundin
Jody Corey-Bloom
Jackie Thomson
Joanne Wojeieszek
Candace Young
Source :
Neurology. 60(6)
Publication Year :
2003

Abstract

To determine whether motor, behavioral, or psychiatric symptoms in Huntington disease (HD) predict skilled nursing facility (SNF) placement.Subjects were participants in the Huntington Study Group's Unified Huntington Disease Rating Scale Database (Rochester, NY) between January 1994 and September 1999. Specific motor, psychiatric, and behavioral variables in subjects residing at home and in SNF were analyzed using chi2 and Student's t-tests. For a subset of subjects for whom longitudinal data existed, a Cox proportional hazards model controlling for age, sex, and disease duration was used.Among 4,809 subjects enrolled, 3,070 had clinically definite HD. Of these, 228 (7.4%) resided in SNF. The SNF residents' average age was 52 years, average disease duration was 8.6 years, and they were predominantly women (63%). The SNF residents had worse motor function (chorea, bradykinesia, gait abnormality, and imbalance, p0.0001); were more likely to have obsessions, compulsions, delusions, and auditory hallucinations; and had more aggressive, disruptive (p0.0001), and irritable behaviors (p = 0.0012). For 1,559 subjects, longitudinal data existed (average length of follow-up, 1.9 years), and 87 (5%) moved from home to SNF. In the Cox model, bradykinesia (HR 1.965, 95% CI 1.083 to 3.564), impaired gait (HR 3.004, 95% CI 1.353 to 6.668), and impaired tandem walking (HR 2.546, 95% CI 1.460 to 4.439) were predictive of SNF placement.Institutionalized patients with HD are more motorically, psychiatrically, and behaviorally impaired than their counterparts living at home. However, motor variables alone predicted institutionalization. Treatment strategies that delay the progression of motor dysfunction in HD may postpone the need for institutionalization.

Details

ISSN :
1526632X
Volume :
60
Issue :
6
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4ccf3a64b1bce31c615756b70cbdcc86