| Literature DB >> 28472970 |
Joshua D Grill1,2,3, Liana G Apostolova4,5, Szofia Bullain6,7, Jeffrey M Burns8, Chelsea G Cox6, Malcolm Dick6, Dean Hartley9, Claudia Kawas6,7, Sarah Kremen5, Jennifer Lingler10, Oscar L Lopez10, Mark Mapstone6,7, Aimee Pierce6,7, Gil Rabinovici11, J Scott Roberts12, Seyed Ahmad Sajjadi6,7, Edmond Teng5,13, Jason Karlawish14.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) has an uncertain etiology and prognosis and may be challenging for clinicians to discuss with patients and families. Amyloid imaging may aid specialists in determining MCI etiology and prognosis, but creates novel challenges related to disease labeling.Entities:
Keywords: Amyloid imaging; Diagnosis; Disclosure; Mild cognitive impairment; Prognosis
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28472970 PMCID: PMC5418690 DOI: 10.1186/s13195-017-0261-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alzheimers Res Ther Impact factor: 6.982
Example language to communicate the MCI diagnosis
| Patient description | Example language to deliver diagnosis |
|---|---|
| MCI believed to be caused by AD | “Your complaints are concerning and not what we expect for a person your age. Any time someone presents with these types of memory concerns later in life, I worry that it is the early stages of Alzheimer’s disease.” “Although we can’t predict outcomes on an individual basis, people with cognitive performance similar to yours are at increased risk for Alzheimer’s dementia. We’re going to watch you closely and do everything we can to help your memory performance and lower your risk for future decline.” |
| MCI believed to be caused by a non-AD neurodegenerative condition or uncertain etiology | “I’m concerned that the types of changes in cognitive performance you are experiencing suggest the possibility of brain disease. There are some things we can discuss to try to help you with these symptoms, but we may need to run some more tests to try to determine what is causing these changes if that is something you wish to pursue.” |
| MCI with positive amyloid PET | “Your scan results suggest that amyloid levels in your brain are elevated. Combined with the other tests we’ve done, it leads me to conclude that Alzheimer’s disease is the most likely cause of your cognitive changes, although other less likely causes remain a possibility. Although I can’t be absolutely certain and we don’t have the individual estimates for timing, people with results like yours are at increased risk for developing dementia over the next few years. Given all of this, I think we need to talk about making an overall plan to manage your condition.” |
| MCI with negative amyloid PET | “Your scan results did not indicate that there is a significant amyloid burden at this time. This suggests that Alzheimer’s disease pathology is not currently present in your brain and your risk for getting dementia is lower than had the scan found amyloid build up. The scan results could change in the future but this could also mean that another brain disorder may be causing your cognitive changes. We still need to try to figure out why you are having these symptoms. We will do that together.” |
AD Alzheimer’s disease, MCI mild cognitive impairment, PET positron emission tomography