| Literature DB >> 22784860 |
Rianne M van der Linde1, Blossom Cm Stephan, George M Savva, Tom Dening, Carol Brayne.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPS) include depressive symptoms, anxiety, apathy, sleep problems, irritability, psychosis, wandering, elation and agitation, and are common in the non-demented and demented population.Entities:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22784860 PMCID: PMC3506942 DOI: 10.1186/alzrt131
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alzheimers Res Ther Impact factor: 6.982
Figure 1Populations and BPS that were the focus of the reviews.
Characteristics of included reviews and summary of findings - older population with dementia or cognitive impairment
| First author | Search date | BPS | Popu-lation | N reviewed | Summary of results | Meta-analysis | Recommendations future research | Reported limitations | Quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monastero [ | Aug 2008 | BPS | MCI | 27 | Prevalence: 35 to 85%. Most common: dep, anx and irr. Hospital-based studies reported higher prevalence than population based studies | - | - Large cohort studies | 4 | |
| Apostolova [ | Dec 2006 | BPS | MCI | 21 | Prevalence: 35 to 75%. Most common BPS: dep, apa, anx and irr. Least common: ela, hal, dis and wan | - | - Large, prospective longitudinal studies | 3 | |
| Seitz [ | Mar 2009 | BPS | Care home | 35 | Prevalence BPS in dementia: 78% (median) | - | See Table 2 | See Table 2 | 3 |
| Zuidema [ | Aug 2005 | BPS | MMSE < 24, care home | 25 | Prevalences ranged considerably, from 3 to 54% for del, 1 to 39% for hal, 8 to 74% for dep, 7 to 69% for anx, 17 to 84% for apa, 48 to 82% for agg or agi, and 11 to 44% for psychical agg. | - | See risk factors | See risk factors | 2 |
| Shub [ | NR | Psy | Dem | 54 | Of seven cross and two long studies directly examining correlation agg and psy, most showed a positive association. | - | - Prospectively designed studies | 3 | |
| Wragg [ | NR | Dep | Dem | 30 | Dep and Psy occurred in 30 to 40% of AD patients. Isolated symptoms were two to three times as frequent as diagnosable affective or psychotic disorders. Paranoid del were the most common psy symptoms. | - | - Specify an a priory hypothesis | 2 | |
| Ropacki [ | 2003 | Psy | Dem | 55 | Prevalence psy: 41% (del 36%, hal: 18%) | - | - Longitudinal designs | 1 | |
| Monastero [ | Aug 2008 | BPS | MCI | 27 | Prospective studies showed that BPSD, particularly depression, may represent risk factors for MCI or predictors for the conversion of MCI to AD. | - | See prevalence | See prevalence | 4 |
| Verkaik [ | Mar 2006 | Dep | Dem | 24 | 1/4 (continous) and 0/3 (categorical) high quality studies found a significant association between severity of AD and prevalence of dep. | - | - Longitudinal study | 5 | |
| Ropacki [ | 2003 | Psy | Dem | 55 | Incidence increased progressively the first three years, after that plateau. Duration several months but less prominent after one year. Associated with more rapid cognitive decline | - | See prevalence | See prevalence | 1 |
| Flirski [ | ? | BPS | Dem | 73 | Behavioural genetics of BPS reviewed: genes coding for APOE E, serotonin receptors, serotonin transporter, COMT, MAO-A, tryptophan hydroxylase and dopamine receptors. A general conclusion is the striking inconsistency of the findings, unsurprising in the field of psychiatric genetics. | - | - Precisely define symptoms | 0 | |
| Zuidema [ | Aug 2005 | BPS | MMSE < 24, care home | 25 | BPSD predicted not only by dem type or stage, but also by the psychosocial environment and the amount of psychoactive medication and physical restraints used. | - | - Effects of manipulation the physical and social environments in nursing homes. | 2 | |
| Wragg [ | NR | Dep | Dem | 30 | - | See prevalence | See prevalence | 2 | |
| Ropacki [ | 2003 | Psy | Dem | 55 | Associations: age, age at onset AD, illness duration. Weak/inconsistent: gender, education, family history dem or psychiatric illness | - | See prevalence | See prevalence | 1 |
| Gaugler [ | 2006 | BPS | Dem | 80 | Behavioural symptoms one of most consistent predictors of nursing home admission in persons with dementia. | - | - Interventions should consider long-term efficacy and timing of nursing home admission in course of dem | 5 | |
| Black [ | Dec 2001 | BPS | Dem | 55 | Pooled correlation coefficients for relationship BPS and caregiver burden (0.57, 95%CI 0.52 to 0.62), caregiver psychological stress (0.41, 0.32 to 0.49) and caregiver depression (0.30, 0.21 to 0.39). Multivariate data supported BPS are predictor of burden of care, psychological distress and dep. Limited long data. Caregiver variables may be more important in predicting institutionalisation than BPS. | See summary of results | - Concept of burden of care is too broad and more clinically relevant measures such as caregiver depression are preferred. | 3 | |
| Lee [ | NR | BPS | Dem | NR | There was no consensus regarding the association with dementia prognosis | - | - Guideline for dementia prognostication | 1 | |
| Fischer [ | NR | Psy | Dem | 6 | Three of six studies showed and association with real-world functioning | - | - Longitudinal studies | 2 | |
| Banerjee [ | Oct 2007 | BPS | Dem | NR | Strong suggestion dep is consistently associated with decreased health related quality of life in dem. Magnitude of associations is moderate and the proportion of variance explained is low. | - | - Quality of life in dementia: determinants, in dementia subtypes, self- versus proxy-report, in different settings, association with outcomes and interventions | NR | 0 |
AD, Alzheimer's disease; Agg, aggression; Anx, anxiety; Biol, biological associations; BPS, behavioural and psychological symptoms; Cross, Cross-sectional; Dem, Dementia; Dep, depressive symptoms; Ela, elation; Long, longitudinal; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; Psy, psychosis; Sle, sleep problems
Characteristics of included reviews and summary of findings - general older population
| First author | Search date | BPS | Popu-lation | N reviewed | Summary of results | Meta-analysis | Recommendations future research | Reported limitations | Quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Seitz [ | Mar 2009 | BPS | Care home | 35 | Prevalence dep symptoms in long term care: 29% (14 to 82%) | - | - Developing countries | 3 | |
| Luppa [ | May 2010 | Dep | Older (60+) | 24 | Prevalence of dep disorders ranged from 4.5 to 37.4%. Pooled prevalence: 17.1% (95% CI 9.7 to 26.1) | Pooled prev major dep: 7.2% (95%CI 4.4 to 10.6) Dep disorders: 17.1 (9.7 to 26.1) | - Large scale | 5 | |
| Chen [ | Jun 1997 | Dep | Older (60+) | 10 | Prevalence dep mood: 14.8 (14.2 to 15.6%), higher in rural communities | Prev dep mood: 14.8% (14.2 to 15.6) | - Similar methodology | 4 | |
| Beekman [ | 1996 | Dep | Older, community dwelling (55+) | 34 | The reported prevalence rates vary enormously (0.4 to 35%). Minor dep: 9.8% (8.3 to 14.3) Clinical dep symptoms: 13.5% (2.8 to 35%) | - | - Focus on those most at risk and in adverse socio-economic conditions | 3 | |
| Meeks [ | Jan 2010 | Dep | Older (55+) | 153 | Dep was generally at least two to three times more prevalent than major dep. Prevalence lower in community settings (9.8%, 4.0 to 22.9) than primary care (15.1 to 35.9%) and LTC (4.0 to 30.5%). | - | - Incidence | 2 | |
| Djernes [ | Sep 2004 | Dep | Older (65+) | 122 | Prevalence clinical relevant depressive symptoms: 7.2 to 49% | - | - Target risk factors, improvement of prevention and treatment of chronic somatic and mental illnesses, adequate social support, prevention social isolation | 2 | |
| Alwahhabi [ | 2001 | Anx | Older (55+) | 119 | - | See disease outcome | See disease outcome | 1 | |
| Huang [ | Aug 2007 | Dep | Older (55+) | 17 | Non-dementia cognitive impairment vs without: incidence dep: OR = 1.5, 95% CI 0.9 to 2.5 prevalence dep: RR = 1.1, 95% CI 0.6 to 2.0. Dem vs. no dem: incidence OR = 1.8, 85% CI 1.2 to 2.9, prevalence RR = 3.9, 95% CI 1.9 to 8.0 | See summary of results | - Risk for cognitive impairment for depression | 5 | |
| Meeks [ | Jan 2010 | Dep | Older (55+) | 153 | 8 to 10% of subthreshold dep developed major dep per year. Median remission rate to non-dep status 27% after > 1 year. | - | - Longitudinal course | See prevalence | 2 |
| Jorm [ | End 2000 | Dep | Dem/Older | 11, 15, 2 | 1991: history of dep (late onset cases) associated with AD (late onset). 2000: Dep increased risk of dem in case control, 95% CI 1.2 to 3.5 and prospective studies, 95% CI 1.1 to 3.2.; 2001: Update 2000: case control studies: RR = 2.0, 95% CI 1.2 to 3.5, prospective studies 1.9, 95% CI 1.1 to 3.2 | Too many results | 1991: | 0 | |
| Ohayon [ | 2003 | Sle | Adult ("healthy or normal") | 65 | Total sleep time, sleep efficiency, percentage of slow-wave sleep, percentage of REM sleep and REM latency all significantly decreased with age. Sleep latency, waking after sleep, waking after sleep duration and the percentage of stage 1 and 2 sleep increase with age, but only sleep efficiency continued to significantly decrease after 60 yr. | Age - sleep: TST: r = -0.76 | - Strict screening methods | 3 | |
| Floyd [ | 2002 | Sle | Adult ("healthy or normal") | 244 | Age and REM%: essentially linear, decreasing 0.6% per decade but ceased during mid-70s followed by small increase 75 to 85 | Age - REM%: r = -0.17 | - REM sleep in women | 2 | |
| Floyd [ | 1996 | Sle | Adult | 41 | Night-time sleep amount and the ability to initiate sleep decreased with age. Larger age-related changes when sleep variables were measured by polysomnography rather than self-report. | Age - sleep, effect size: Sleep latency: 0.19 (0.14 to 0.24) WASO frequency: 0.38 (0.34 to 0.42) WASO duration: 0.74 (0.71 to -0.77) Night time sleep amount: -0.33 (-0.37 to -0.28) | - Controlling for health moderators (carefully assessed for levels of depression, sleep apnea and use of psychoactive substances) | 1 | |
| Huang [ | Aug 2007 | Dep | Older (55+) | 28 | Significant OR and RR for increased dep in old age: stroke, loss of hearing, loss of vision, cardiac disease or chronic lung disease had a. Significant OR but un-significant RR: arthritis, hypertension and diabetes. Both OR and RR not significant: gastro-intestinal disease | Too many results | 5 | ||
| Huang [ | Aug 2007 | Dep | Older (55+) | 31 | Chronic disease - dep: RR = 1.5, 95% CI 1.2 to 2.0. poor SRH - dep: RR = 2.4, 95% CI 1.9 to 3.0. | Chronic disease - dep: RR = 1.5 (1.2 to 2.0) SRH - dep: RR = 2.4 (1.9 to 3.0) | 5 | ||
| Almeida [ | Dep | Older (70+) | 17 | High tHcy increased risk of dep: OR = 1.7, 95% CI 1.4 to 2..1 TT vs. CC carriers: OR = 1.2, 95% CI 1.0 to 1.5 | High tHcy - dep: OR = 1.7 (1.4 to 2.1) | - Sufficiently powered randomised trials | 4 | ||
| Stetler [ | May 2009 | Dep | Adult | 414 | Dep vs no dep: Cortisol d = 0.6 (95% CI 0.5 to 0.7) Adrenocorticotropic-releasing hormone d = 0.28 (95% CI 0.2 to 0.4) Corticotropin-releasing hormone d = 0.02 (95% CI -0.5 to 0.5) | Too many results | - Bioinformatic technologies | 3 | |
| Kuo [ | Sep 2004 | Dep | Adult | 19 | High concentrations C-reactive protein predictive of cognitive decline and dem. Relations to dep cross and not consistent. | - | - Prospective study c-reactive protein-dep | NR | 3 |
| Kuo [ | Mar 2004 | Dep | Older (55+) | NR | Growing evidence of association hyper-homocysteinemia and cognitive impairment, dem and dep. Proposed mechanisms include angiotoxicity, neurotoxicity, and inhibition of collagen cross-linking | - | - Role of homocysteine in prevention | NR | 3 |
| Camus [ | Jun 2003 | Dep | Older | NR | Potential ways association dep - vascular disease: 1 direct influence vascular disease, 2 direct influence dep, 3 common causes | - | - Pathophysiological and genetic background of vascular depression | NR | 1 |
| Vink [ | Dec 2005 | Anx | Older (50+) | 80 | Risk factors anx and dep showed many similarities but some differences were found. Biological factors may be more important in predicting dep, and a differential effect of social factors on dep and anx was found. | - | - Intervention (whether manipulation of risk factors reduces the onset of anx/dep) | 1 | |
| Chen [ | Jun 1997 | Dep | Older (60+) | 10 | The patterns of risk factors were similar to those in western countries | See prevalence | See prevalence | See prevalence | 4 |
| Meeks [ | Jan 2010 | Dep | Older (55+) | 153 | Risk factors: female, medical burden, disability and low social support; neurological illnesses (Parkinson's disease, stroke, AD) | - | - While some risk factors are well established, others remain to be identified. | See prevalence | 2 |
| Djernes [ | Sep 2004 | Dep | Older (65+) | 122 | Risk factors: female, somatic illness, cognitive and functional impairment, lack of social contacts, history of dep | - | See prevalence | See prevalence | 2 |
| Cole [ | 2001 | Dep | Older (50+) | 20 | Risk factors, Qualitative: disability, new medical illness, poor health status, prior depression, poor self-perceived health, and bereavement. Quantitative: bereavement, sleep disturbance, disability, prior depression, female gender | 13 risk factors investigated. OR ranged from 1.0 to 3.3, significant risk factors: bereavement, sleep disturbance, disability, prior dep, female gender | - Intervention | 2 | |
| Vink [ | Dec 2005 | Anx, Dep | Older (50+) | 80 | Risk factors both anx and dep: personality, coping strategies, previous psychopathology, social network, stressful life events, female. Dep: smaller network size, being unmarried. | - | See biological | See biological | 1 |
| Meeks [ | Jan 2010 | Dep | Older (55+) | 153 | Consequences: disability, greater healthcare utilisation, increase suicide ideation | - | - More sophisticated health economic studies | See prevalence | 2 |
| Alwahhabi [ | 2001 | Anx | Older (55+) | 119 | Limitations: understanding expression anx, variable definitions elderly, diagnostic instruments. Anx in elderly potential for negative consequences independent of comorbidity major dep. | - | - Definition of elderly | 1 | |
AD, Alzheimer's disease; Agg, aggression; Anx, anxiety; BPS, behavioural and psychological symptoms; Cross, Cross-sectional; Dem, Dementia; Dep, depressive symptoms; Ela, elation; Long, longitudinal; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; Prev, prevalence; Psy, psychosis; Sle, sleep problems; SRH, self-rated health
Methodological quality of systematic reviews assessed with the AMSTAR measurement tool
| Author | 1 A priori design | 2 Duplicate | 3 Search | 4 Publication status | 5 List of studies | 6 Characteristics studies | 7 Scientific quality reported | 8 Conclusions | 9 Combination methods | 10 Publication bias | 11 Conflict of interest | Score | Quality |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Almeida [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No | 4 | Low |
| Alwahhabi [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | No | No | No | Yes | No | Not applicable | No | No | 1 | Low |
| Apostolova [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Not applicable | No | No | 3 | Low |
| Banerjee [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | No | No | No | No | Not applicable | No | No | 0 | Low |
| Beekman [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | Can't answer | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Not applicable | No | No | 3 | Low |
| Black [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | 3 | Low |
| Camus [ | No | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | No | Not applicable | No | No | 1 | Low |
| Chen [ | No | Can't answer | No | Yes | No I | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | 4 | Low |
| Cole [ | Can't answer | No | Can't answer | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | No | 2 | Low |
| Djernes [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | Yes | Yes | No | Not applicable | No | No | 2 | Low |
| Fischer [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | No | Yes | No | Yes | Not applicable | No | No | 2 | Low |
| Flirski [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | Can't answer | No | No | No | No | Not applicable | No | No | 0 | Low |
| Floyd [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | No | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | 1 | Low |
| Floyd [ | Can't answer | Yes | Can't answer | Yes | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | 2 | Low |
| Gaugler [ | Can't answer | Yes | Can't answer | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Not applicable | No | No | 5 | Moderate |
| Huang [ | Can't answer | Yes | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No | 5 | Moderate |
| Huang [ | Can't answer | Yes | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No | 5 | Moderate |
| Huang [ | Can't answer | Yes | Can't answer | No | No | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | No | 5 | Moderate |
| Jorm [ | No | Can't answer | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | No | No | No | No | No | No | 0 | Low |
| Kuo [ | Can't answer | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | No | Yes | Not applicable | No | No | 3 | Low |
| Kuo [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | No | No I | Yes | No | Yes | Not applicable | No | No | 3 | Low |
| Lee [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | No | No | Yes | No | No | Not applicable | No | No | 1 | Low |
| Luppa [ | Can't answer | No | Can't answer | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | 5 | Moderate |
| Meeks [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | No | No | Yes | No | Yes | Not applicable | No | No | 2 | Low |
| Monastero [ | Can't answer | Yes | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Not applicable | No | No | 4 | Low |
| Ohayon [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | 3 | Low |
| Ropacki [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | No | Yes | No | No | Not applicable | No | No | 1 | Low |
| Seitz [ | Can't answer | Yes | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | Yes | No | Yes | Not applicable | No | No | 3 | Low |
| Shub [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Not applicable | No | No | 3 | Moderate |
| Stetler [ | Can't answer | No | No | No | No | Yes | No | Yes | No | No | No | 3 | Low |
| Verkaik [ | Yes | Yes | Can't answer | No | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Not applicable | No | No | 5 | Moderate |
| Vink [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | No | Yes | No | No | Not applicable | No | No | 1 | Low |
| Wragg [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | No | No | Yes | No | Yes | Not applicable | No | No | 2 | Low |
| Zuidema [ | Can't answer | Can't answer | No | Can't answer | No | Yes | No | No | Not applicable | No | No | 2 | Low |
Response options: yes, no, can't answer, not applicable.
Full questions: A priori design: Was an "a priori" design provided? Duplicate: Was there duplicate study selection and data extraction? Search: Was a comprehensive literature search performed? Publication status: Was the status of publication (that is, grey literature) used as an inclusion criterion? List of studies: Was a list of studies (included and excluded) provided? Characteristics studies: Were the characteristics of the included studies provided? Scientific quality reported: Was the scientific quality of the included studies assessed and documented? Conclusion: Was the scientific quality of the included studies used appropriately in formulating conclusions? Combination methods: Were the methods used to combine the findings of studies appropriate? Publication bias: Was the likelihood of publication bias assessed? Conflict of interest: Was the conflict of interest stated? Score: The maximum AMSTAR score a review can receive is 11 (11 for meta-analyses and 10 for systematic reviews) Quality: Scores of 0 to 4 indicated low quality, 5 to 8 moderate quality, and 9 to 11 high quality.
Figure 2Overview of the recommendations and limitations reported by the included reviews. In total, 36 reviews were included in the review of reviews. Only recommendations and limitations reported by three or more reviews are included in the figures. Reviews that make multiple recommendations or limitations may be included more than once.
Figure 3Number of reviews that reported on each symptom by the topic of the review. Agg, aggression; Agi, agitation; Anx, anxiety; BPS, behavioural and psychological symptoms; Dep, depressive symptoms; Ela, elation; Psy, psychosis; Sle, sleep problems; Wan, wandering; In total 36 reviews were included in the review of reviews. Reviews that report on multiple topics or more than one BPS are included more than once.