| Literature DB >> 29070641 |
Stacey Fisher1,2,3, Amy Hsu1,2, Nassim Mojaverian2, Monica Taljaard1,3, Gregory Huyer4, Douglas G Manuel1,2,3,5,6, Peter Tanuseputro1,2,6,7,8.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: The burden of disease from dementia is a growing global concern as incidence increases dramatically with age, and average life expectancy has been increasing around the world. Planning for an ageing population requires reliable projections of dementia prevalence; however, existing population projections are simple and have poor predictive accuracy. The Dementia Population Risk Tool (DemPoRT) will predict incidence of dementia in the population setting using multivariable modelling techniques and will be used to project dementia prevalence. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: The derivation cohort will consist of elderly Ontario respondents of the Canadian Community Health Survey (CCHS) (2001, 2003, 2005 and 2007; 18 764 males and 25 288 females). Prespecified predictors include sociodemographic, general health, behavioural, functional and health condition variables. Incident dementia will be identified through individual linkage of survey respondents to population-level administrative healthcare databases (1797 and 3281 events, and 117 795 and 166 573 person-years of follow-up, for males and females, respectively, until 31 March 2014). Using time of first dementia capture as the primary outcome and death as a competing risk, sex-specific proportional hazards regression models will be estimated. The 2008/2009 CCHS survey will be used for validation (approximately 4600 males and 6300 females). Overall calibration and discrimination will be assessed as well as calibration within predefined subgroups of importance to clinicians and policy makers. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: Research ethics approval has been granted by the Ottawa Health Science Network Research Ethics Board. DemPoRT results will be submitted for publication in peer-review journals and presented at scientific meetings. The algorithm will be assessable online for both population and individual uses. TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: ClinicalTrials.gov NCT03155815, pre-results. © Article author(s) (or their employer(s) unless otherwise stated in the text of the article) 2017. All rights reserved. No commercial use is permitted unless otherwise expressly granted.Entities:
Keywords: dementia; health behavior; population projection; risk stratification
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 29070641 PMCID: PMC5665213 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-018018
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Prespecification of predictor variables for DemPoRT with initial degrees of freedom (df) allocation
| Variable | Scale | Initial variable specification | df |
| Sociodemographic factors | |||
| Age | Continuous | 5 knot spline: valid range: 55–102 (male), 55–101 (female) | 4 |
| Sex | Categorical | Stratified: Male; female | NA |
| Ethnicity | Categorical | Seven categories: Caucasian; African-American; Chinese; Aboriginal; Japanese/Korean/South East Asian/Filipino; other/multiple origin/unknown/Latin American; South Asian/Arab/West Asian | 6 |
| Immigrant | Dichotomous | Yes; no | 1 |
| Education | Categorical | Four categories: less than secondary school; secondary school graduation; some postsecondary; postsecondary graduation | 3 |
| Marital status | Categorical | Four categories: now married/common law; separated/divorced; widowed; single | 3 |
| Neighbourhood social and material Deprivation | Ordinal | Three categories: low (1st or 2nd quintile); high 4th or 5th quintile; moderate (3rd quintile) | 2 |
| General health | |||
| Sense of belonging to local community | Ordinal | Four categories: very strong; somewhat strong; somewhat weak; very weak | 3 |
| Self-perceived stress | Ordinal | Five categories: not at all stressful; not very stressful; a bit stressful; quite a bit stressful; extremely stressful | 4 |
| Self-rated health | Ordinal | Five categories: poor; fair; good; very good; excellent | 4 |
| Health behaviours | |||
| Pack years of smoking | Continuous | 3 knot spline: valid range: 0–112 (male), 0–78 (female) | 2 |
| Smoking status | Categorical | Four categories: non-smoker; current smoker; former smoker quit <5 years ago; former smoker quit >5 years ago | 3 |
| Alcohol consumption (number of drinks last week) | Continuous | 3 knot spline: valid range: 0–50 (male), 0–24 (female) | 2 |
| Former drinker | Dichotomous | Yes; no | 1 |
| Consumption of fruit, salad, carrot and other vegetables (average daily frequency) | Continuous | 3 knot spline: valid range: 0–48 (male), 0–31 (female) | 2 |
| Potato consumption (average daily frequency) | Continuous | 3 knot spline: valid range: 0–2 | 2 |
| Juice consumption (average daily consumption | Continuous | 3 knot spline: valid range: 0–6 (male), 0–5 (female) | 2 |
| Leisure physical activity (average daily METs (kcal/kg/day)) | Continuous | 3 knot spline: valid range: 0–16 (male), 0–12 (female) | 2 |
| Functional measures | |||
| Personal hygiene and care | Dichotomous | Does not need help; needs help | 1 |
| Locomotion in the home | Dichotomous | Does not need help; needs help | 1 |
| Meal preparation | Dichotomous | Does not need help; needs help | 1 |
| Running errands | Dichotomous | Does not need help; needs help | 1 |
| Ordinary housework | Dichotomous | Does not need help; needs help | 1 |
| Heavy housework | Dichotomous | Does not need help; needs help | 1 |
| Finances | Dichotomous | Does not need help; needs help | 1 |
| Health conditions | |||
| Heart disease | Dichotomous | Yes; no | 1 |
| Stroke | Dichotomous | Yes; no | 1 |
| Diabetes | Dichotomous | Yes; no | 1 |
| Mood disorder | Dichotomous | Yes; no | 1 |
| High blood pressure | Dichotomous | Yes; no | 1 |
| Body mass index | Continuous | 3 knot spline: valid range: 10–44 (male), 10–47 (female) | 2 |
| Design | |||
| Survey year | Ordinal | Four categories: 2000/2001, 2002/2003, 2004/2005, 2006/2007 | 3 |
DemPoRT, Dementia Population Risk Tool; METs, metabolic equivalent tasks.