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Clinical Perception and Treatment Options for Behavioral and Psychological Symptoms of Dementia (BPSD) in Italy

Authors :
D'Antonio, Fabrizia
Tremolizzo, Lucio
Zuffi, Marta
Pomati, Simone
Farina
Margherita, Alberoni
Serena, Amici
Arighi, Andrea
Francesca, Baglio
Federica, Barocco
Amalia Cecilia Bruni
Giuseppe, Bruno
Cagnin, Annachiara
Elena, Calabrese
Antonio, Callari
Marco, Canevelli
Rosanna, Colao
Matteo Cotta Ramusino
Eduardo, Cumbo
Chiara, Cupidi
Alfredo, Costa
Sabrina, Curcio
Chiara, Cutaia
Carlo de Lena
Mario Tommaso dell'Osa
Babette, Dijk
Francesco Di Lorenzo
Maria, Grazia
Maggio, Di
Andrea, Francescani
Francesca, Frangipane
Valeria, Isella
Claudio, Ivaldi
Sebastiano, Lorusso
Antonina, Luca
Giuseppe, Magnani
Luigi Giovanni Manfredi
Michele, Maniscalco
Lorenzo, Marchese
Michela, Marcon
Alessandra, Marcone
Maria Giuseppina Mascia
Antonio, Milia
Concetta, Mina
Cristina, Moglia
Flavio Mariano Nobili
Giulia, Perini
Patrizia, Perrone
Giuseppina, Pilia
Federico, Pozzi
Gianfranco, Puccio
Francesca, Saibene
Ermanno Matteo Soave
Elena, Sinforiani
Micaela Sepe Monti
Michelangelo Stanzani Maserati
Andrea, Stracciari
Gloria, Tognoni
Marco, Vista
D'Antonio, F
Tremolizzo, L
Zuffi, M
Pomati, S
Farina, E
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Frontiers Research Foundation, 2022.

Abstract

BackgroundBehavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD) have a high prevalence, and their presence is associated with a severe impact in terms of social costs. However, dedicated clinical tools or biomarkers to detect these symptoms are lacking. Thus, BPSD management in clinical settings is challenging. The aim of this study was to investigate the perception and the treatment strategies for BPSD in Italian centers working in the dementia field.MethodsA multicenter, national survey was developed by BPSD Study Group of the Italian Neurological Society for Dementia (SINDEM). The survey consisted of a semi-structured questionnaire that was e-mailed to SINDEM members, dementia centers part of the national network of memory clinics (Centers for Cognitive Deterioration and Dementia [CDCD]), and clinicians working in dementia care settings. The questions were focused on (1) perceived global frequency and relevance of BPSD; (2) tools used to assess BPSD; (3) pharmacological treatment for psychosis, apathy, agitation, aggression, depression, anxiety, sleep, and nutrition disturbances; (4) non-pharmacological treatments; (5) drugs side effects.ResultsOne-hundred and thirty-six clinicians participated in this study. Seventy-nine participants worked in a CDCD and 57 in other settings. The perceived frequency of BPSD was 74%. BPSD are detected by means of a clinical assessment for 96.3% or a caregiver interview for 97%. For psychosis treatment the first choice was atypical antipsychotics (83.3%), followed by typical antipsychotic (8.9%) and antidepressants (4.8%). For agitation, atypical antipsychotics were the first-choice treatment in 64% of cases and antidepressants in 16.1%. For aggression, the most used drugs were atypical antipsychotics (82.9%). For anxiety, 55.2% use antidepressants, 17.9% use atypical antipsychotics, and 16.9% use benzodiazepines. Interestingly, most of the centers apply non-pharmacological treatments for BPSD. Some differences emerged comparing the responses from CDCD and other care settings.ConclusionThe survey results revealed many differences in BPSD perception, treatment options, and observed side effect according to the clinical setting. This variability can be explained by the absence of clear guidelines, by differences in patients' characteristics, and by clinical practice based on subjective experience. These results suggest that producing guidelines for the pharmacological treatment of BPSD is a major need.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bdd74cbe0a1fb8e9f9ad9805747edcc2