| Literature DB >> 22536535 |
Erin L Abner1, Richard J Kryscio, Gregory E Cooper, David W Fardo, Gregory A Jicha, Marta S Mendiondo, Peter T Nelson, Charles D Smith, Linda J Van Eldik, Lijie Wan, Frederick A Schmitt.
Abstract
Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) refers to the clinical state between normal cognition and probable Alzheimer's disease (AD), but persons diagnosed with MCI may progress to non-AD forms of dementia, remain MCI until death, or recover to normal cognition. Risk factors for these various clinical changes, which we term "transitions," may provide targets for therapeutic interventions. Therefore, it is useful to develop new approaches to assess risk factors for these transitions. Markov models have been used to investigate the transient nature of MCI represented by amnestic single-domain and mixed MCI states, where mixed MCI comprised all other MCI subtypes based on cognitive assessments. The purpose of this study is to expand this risk model by including a clinically determined MCI state as an outcome. Analyses show that several common risk factors play different roles in affecting transitions to MCI and dementia. Notably, APOE-4 increases the risk of transition to clinical MCI but does not affect the risk for a final transition to dementia, and baseline hypertension decreases the risk of transition to dementia from clinical MCI.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22536535 PMCID: PMC3320090 DOI: 10.1155/2012/291920
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Alzheimers Dis
Criteria for state classification.
| State | Definition |
|---|---|
| Normal cognition | No cognitive test score more than 1.5 standard deviations (SD) below the age-adjusted mean; absence of MCICC or Dementia (see below) |
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| Test-based amnestic MCI (aMCITB) | At least one score more than 1.5 SD below the age-adjusted mean on the following measures of episodic memory: Wechsler Logical Memory, Benton Visual Retention Test (number correct or number of errors), a word list (Consortium to Establish a Registry in Alzheimer's Disease word list or California Verbal Learning Test ) total learning score, delayed recall score, savings score, and the maximum recalled minus delayed recall score |
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| Test-based mixed MCI (mMCITB) | At least one score more than 1.5 SD below the age-adjusted mean on the following measures of language and executive function: phonemic or category verbal fluency, Boston Naming Test (15-item), and Trail Making Tests A or B |
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| Clinical consensus-based MCI (MCICC) | A cognitive complaint by the subject or informant, or evidence for longitudinal decline on cognitive test performance (at least 1.5 SD decline); generally intact global cognition; no or minimal functional impairment; not demented by DSM-IV criteria; neurodegenerative etiology suspected |
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| Dementia | Meeting DSM-IV criteria for dementia, or NINCDS/ARDRA criteria for possible or probable AD, or NINDS-AIREN criteria for possible or probable vascular dementia, or DLB Consortium criteria for Lewy body disease |
Figure 1Flow diagram of transitions possible between subject visits. Normal cognition is the base state for transitions made from normal cognition, test-based amnestic MCI, and test-based mixed MCI; clinical consensus MCI is the base state otherwise.
Subject characteristics (n = 554).
| Characteristic | Summary |
|---|---|
| Age at entry, | 72.7 ± 7.8 |
| Female, % | 64.3 |
| Family history of dementia, % | 41.3 |
| At least one APOE-4 allele, % | 30.0 |
| >12 years of education, % | 88.1 |
| History of hypertension at entry, % | 36.6 |
| Hypertension treated with medication, % | 86.5 |
| Number of assessments (mean ± SD) | 10.8 ± 4.5 |
| Time between assessments, | 1.1 ± 0.4 |
One-step transition matrix (number of assessments [% of prior visit state]).
| Prior visit | Current visit | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Normal | Amnestic MCITB | Mixed MCITB | Clinical Consensus MCI | Dementia | Death | |
| Normal | 2192 (68.3) | 478 (14.9) | 385 (12.0) | 34 (1.1) | 19 (0.6) | 100 (3.1) |
| Amnestic MCITB | 448 (59.3) | 148 (19.6) | 108 (14.3) | 23 (3.1) | 10 (1.3) | 18 (2.4) |
| Mixed MCITB | 341 (33.0) | 88 (8.5) | 453 (43.8) | 47 (4.5) | 27 (2.6) | 79 (7.6) |
| Clinical Consensus MCI | 101 (66.9) | 34 (22.5) | 16 (10.6) | |||
Estimated relative risks and 95% confidence intervals for one-step transitions to test-based amnestic MCI (aMCITB), test-based mixed MCI (mMCITB), or clinical consensus MCI (MCICC) versus the base state of normal cognition (bolding denotes statistical significance).
| Risk factor* | aMCITB versus Normal | mMCITB versus Normal | MCICC versus Normal |
|---|---|---|---|
| Age |
| 1.07 (1.05–1.08) |
|
| Female sex (versus male) |
| 1.01 (0.82–1.24) | 0.71 (0.46–1.09) |
| Family history of dementia (yes versus no) | 0.81 (0.65–1.00) |
| 1.04 (0.66–1.64) |
| ≥one APOE-4 allele (versus none) | 1.04 (0.83–1.31) | 1.12 (0.89–1.40) |
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| ≤12 years of education (versus >12 years) | 1.24 (0.89–1.74) | 1.79 (1.33–2.42) |
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| History of hypertension (yes versus no) | 0.95 (0.76–1.18) | 1.04 (0.84–1.28) | 0.79 (0.42–1.49) |
| aMCITB at prior assessment (versus normal) | 1.15 (0.91–1.45) | 1.00 (0.77–1.29) |
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| mMCITB at prior assessment (versus normal) | 0.76 (0.57–1.02) |
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*As risk factors do not depend on the prior state, covariate effects are the same regardless of whether transitions occur from a prior state of normal cognition, aMCITB, or mMCITB.
Estimated relative risks and 95% confidence intervals for one-step transitions to dementia or death without dementia versus the base state of normal cognition or clinical consensus MCI (MCICC) (bolding denotes statistical significance).
| Risk factors* (normal is base state; no history of MCICC) | Dementia versus normal | Death versus normal |
|---|---|---|
| Age |
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| Female sex (versus male) | 1.87 (0.95–3.68) |
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| Family history of dementia (yes versus no) | 1.66 (0.92–3.01) | 0.82 (0.57–1.17) |
| ≥one APOE-4 allele (versus none) |
| 0.97 (0.67 –1.42) |
| ≤12 years of education (versus >12 years) | 0.75 (0.26–2.18) | 1.33 (0.80 –.22) |
| History of hypertension (yes versus no) | 0.79 (0.42–1.49) |
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| aMCITB at prior assessment (versus normal) | 1.85 (0.82–4.21) | 0.64 (0.38–1.08) |
| mMCITB at prior assessment (versus normal) |
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| Risk factors (MCICCis base state) | Dementia versus MCICC | Death versus MCICC |
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| Age | 1.05 (0.98–1.13) | 1.03 (0.94–1.13) |
| Female sex (versus male) | 1.75 (0.67–4.56) | 1.15 (0.65–3.76) |
| Family history of dementia (yes versus no) | 2.88 (0.95–8.72) | 0.68 (0.15–3.03) |
| ≥one APOE-4 allele (versus none) | 0.69 (0.22–2.16) | 2.33 (0.61–8.90) |
| ≤12 years of education (versus >12 years) | 0.97 (0.27–3.46) | 0.55 (0.10–2.99) |
| History of hypertension (yes versus no) |
| 0.70 (0.20–2.47) |
*As risk factors depend only on the base state, covariate effects in the top half of the table are the same whether transitions occur from a prior state of normal cognition, aMCITB, or mMCITB.