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Spectrum of cognition short of dementia: Framingham Heart Study and Mayo Clinic Study of Aging. | LitMetric

Spectrum of cognition short of dementia: Framingham Heart Study and Mayo Clinic Study of Aging.

Neurology

From the Department of Neurology, Mayo Alzheimer's Disease Research Center (D.S.K., B.F.B., R.C.P., R.O.R., W.A.R.), Division of Epidemiology, Department of Health Sciences Research (R.O.R., M.M. Mielke, W.A.R., R.C.P.), Division of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics, Department of Health Sciences Research (V.S.P., J.A., R.H.C.), and Department of Psychiatry and Psychology, Division of Neurocognitive Disorders (R.J.I., M.M. Machulda, J.F.), College of Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN; and Departments of Neurology (A.B., S.D., R.A., S.A., P.A.W., S.S.) and Biostatistics (A.B.), Boston University Schools of Medicine and Public Health, MA.

Published: November 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study aimed to understand the neuropsychological factors that influence the risk of dementia in older adults, focusing on those with normal cognition and mild cognitive impairment.
  • Researchers analyzed data from the Framingham Heart Study and Mayo Clinic Study, examining cognitive performance across different domains to categorize participants' cognitive status and predict future dementia cases over six years.
  • Findings showed that individuals with amnestic profiles faced higher dementia risks than those with nonamnestic profiles, indicating that more detailed cognitive assessments can provide important prognostic insights about Alzheimer's disease rather than relying on a single test.

Article Abstract

Objective: To understand the neuropsychological basis of dementia risk among persons in the spectrum including cognitive normality and mild cognitive impairment.

Methods: We quantitated risk of progression to dementia in elderly persons without dementia from 2 population-based studies, the Framingham Heart Study (FHS) and Mayo Clinic Study of Aging (MCSA), aged 70 to 89 years at enrollment. Baseline cognitive status was defined by performance in 4 domains derived from batteries of neuropsychological tests (that were similar but not identical for FHS and MCSA) at cut scores corresponding to SDs of ≤-0.5, -1, -1.5, and -2 from normative means. Participants were characterized as having no cognitive impairment (reference group), or single or multiple amnestic or nonamnestic profiles at each cut score. Incident dementia over the following 6 years was determined by consensus committee at each study separately.

Results: The pattern of hazard ratios for incident dementia, rates of incident dementia and positive predictive values across cognitive test cut scores, and number of affected domains was similar although not identical across the FHS and MCSA. Dementia risks were higher for amnestic profiles than for nonamnestic profiles, and for multidomain compared with single-domain profiles.

Conclusions: Cognitive domain subtypes, defined by neuropsychologically derived cut scores and number of low-performing domains, differ substantially in prognosis in a conceptually logical manner that was consistent between FHS and MCSA. Neuropsychological characterization of elderly persons without dementia provides valuable information about prognosis. The heterogeneity of risk of dementia cannot be captured concisely with one test or a single definition or cutpoint.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4653114PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1212/WNL.0000000000002100DOI Listing

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