| Literature DB >> 33061334 |
Petra Maresova1, Jan Hruska1, Blanka Klimova2, Sabina Barakovic3, Ondrej Krejcar4.
Abstract
Nowadays, the population is rapidly ageing because of increasing life expectancy and decreasing birth rates. Thus, the purpose of this systematic review is to prepare a comprehensive overview which identifies the activities of daily living (ADLs) that are gradually reduced among patients with dementia, as well as explore the therapies applied in relation to dementia and how they effectively improve the quality of life (QoL) of patients and caregivers. Furthermore, we aim to summarise the ADL activities influenced by therapies and examine the treatment costs and care for patients so that recommendations for research and development (R&D) can be made to improve both the QoL of people with dementia and cost-saving measures. The research focuses on four selected neurodegenerative diseases: Alzheimer, Parkinson, vascular dementia, and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. Therefore, the peer-reviewed English written articles from 2014 to 2019 were searched between September 1 and December 13, 2019. Twenty-seven papers were included in the analysis. The results show that essential assistance occurs in connection with activities: eating, drinking, dressing, bathing, personal hygiene, use of the toilet, and transport. By contrast, shopping or cleaning is not addressed as much. A lower ability to take care of oneself is connected with poor patient health and higher social care costs because the patient requires care from external sources, such as home aid or nurse visits. The challenge that remains is to shift new knowledge from scientific disciplines and connect it with the needs of patients to remove legitimate barriers and increase the acceptance of new solutions by popularisation. Additionally, regarding the burden on caregivers, it would be appropriate to promote this area of education and employment so that family members can use formal caregivers, ensuring them free time and much-needed rest.Entities:
Keywords: activities of daily living; costs; neurodegenerative diseases; quality of life
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 33061334 PMCID: PMC7538005 DOI: 10.2147/CIA.S264688
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Interv Aging ISSN: 1176-9092 Impact factor: 4.458
Activities of Daily Living Overview
| Activities of Daily Living (ADLs) | Instrumental Activities of Daily Living (IADLs) |
|---|---|
| Individual hygiene Washing, brushing teeth, getting dressed, nail and hair care | Companionship and mental support |
| Continence management A person’s mental and physical capability to appropriately use the bathroom | Transportation and shopping |
| Dressing A person’s capability to choose and wear the appropriate clothes for various purposes | Preparing meals |
| Maintaining food A person’s capability of feeding herself/himself | Managing a household |
| Ambulating The degree of a person’s capability to move from one position to the other and to stroll on one’s own | Managing medications |
| Communicating with others | |
| Managing finances |
Distribution of Examined Articles
| Key Words Used “AND” Between All Words | WoS | PubMed |
|---|---|---|
| Alzheimer long-term care | 155 | 34 |
| Parkinson long-term care | 101 | 22 |
| Vascular dementia long-term care | 6 | 3 |
| Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis long-term care | 19 | 42 |
| Alzheimer activity of daily living | 363 | 103 |
| Parkinson activity of daily living | 344 | 99 |
| Vascular dementia activity of daily living | 23 | 20 |
| Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis activity of daily living | 12 | 32 |
Figure 1Process of filtering articles.
Figure 2Cluster analysis of selected articles for research.
Citation Amount of Selected Articles
| Number of Citations | Article |
|---|---|
| 144 | “Determinants of costs of care for patients with Alzheimer’s disease. (L. Jönsson et al, 2006)” |
| 79 | “Net costs of dementia by disease stage: Net costs of dementia by disease stage. (Leicht et al, 2011)” |
| 67 | “Predictors of costs of care in Alzheimer’s disease: A multinational sample of 1222 patients. (Gustavsson, Brinck, et al, 2011)” |
| 60 | “Activities of daily living and quality of life across different stages of dementia: a UK study. (Giebel et al, 2015)” |
| 29 | “Costs of care in a mild-to-moderate Alzheimer clinical trial sample: Key resources and their determinants. (Gustavsson, Cattelin, et al, 2011)” |
| 28 | “Cost and Care of Patients with Alzheimer’s Disease: Clinical Predictors in German Health Care Settings. (Reese et al, 2011)” |
| 25 | “The Effect of Reminiscence Therapy on Cognition, Depression, and Activities of Daily Living for Patients With Alzheimer Disease. (Duru Aşiret & Kapucu, 2016)” |
| 19 | “Economic evaluation of occupational therapy in Parkinson’s disease: A randomized controlled trial: Economic Evaluation OTIP Study. (Sturkenboom et al, 2015)” |
| 15 | “Quality of Life and Costs in Parkinson’s Disease: A Cross Sectional Study in Hungary. (Tamás et al, 2014)” |
| 11 | “Health Care Utilisation and Cost Outcomes of a Comprehensive Dementia Care Program for Medicare Beneficiaries. (Jennings et al, 2019)” |
| 10 | “Medical management, costs, and consequences of Alzheimer’s disease in Germany: an analysis of health claims data. (Brüggenjürgen et al, 2015)” |
| 10 | “Disease Progression in Mild Dementia due to Alzheimer Disease in an 18-Month Observational Study (GERAS): The Impact on Costs and Caregiver Outcomes. (Jones et al., 2017)” |
| 9 | “Identifying factors of activities of daily living important for cost and caregiver outcomes in Alzheimer’s disease. (Reed et al, 2016)” |
| 9 | “Direct and Indirect Assessments of Activities of Daily Living in Behavioural Variant Frontotemporal Dementia and Alzheimer Disease. (Lima-Silva et al, 2015)” |
| 7 | “Impact of functional alterations on quality of life in patients with Alzheimer’s disease. (Barbe et al, 2017)” |
| 7 | “Predictors of Societal Costs in Dementia Patients and Their Informal Caregivers: A Two-Year Prospective Cohort Study. (Joling et al, 2015)” |
| 5 | “Behavioural Ratings of Executive Functioning Explain Instrumental Activities of Daily Living beyond Test Scores in Parkinson’s Disease. (Puente et al, 2016)” |
| 4 | “Taking a positive spin: preserved initiative and performance of everyday activities across mild Alzheimer’s, vascular and mixed dementia: Preserved everyday activities across dementia subtypes. (Giebel et al, 2017)” |
| 4 | “Measuring activities of daily living in Parkinson’s disease: On a road to nowhere and back again? (Hagell, 2019)” |
| 2 | “Dying of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis: Health care use and cost in the last year of life. (Zwicker et al, 2019)” |
| 2 | “Long-term medical costs of Alzheimer’s disease: matched cohort analysis. (Sopina et al, 2019)” |
| 1 | “Activities of Daily Living and Their Relationship to Health-Related Quality of Life in Patients with Parkinson Disease After Subthalamic Nucleus Deep Brain Stimulation. (Gorecka-Mazur et al., 2019)” |
| 1 | “The Real-World Medicare Costs of Alzheimer Disease: Considerations for Policy and Care. (Pyenson et al, 2019)” |
| 0 | “Increase in direct social care costs of Alzheimer’s disease in Japan depending on dementia severity. (Takechi et al, 2019)” |
| 0 | “Short- and long-term cost and utilisation of health care resources in Parkinson’s disease in the UK: Costs of Treating PD in UK. (Weir et al, 2018)” |
| 0 | “Everyday functioning in Parkinson’s disease: Evidence from the Revised-Observed Tasks of Daily Living (OTDL-R). (Lopez et al, 2019)” |
| 0 | “Determinants of time to institutionalisation and related health care and societal costs in a community-based cohort of patients with Alzheimer’s disease dementia. (Belger et al, 2019)” |
Summary of Selected Studies Related to Types of Therapy and Its Effectiveness for People with Dementia
| Study/Authors | Methods and Goal of the Study | Dataset Summary and Results | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Used Methods | Main Goal | Number of Patients, Avg. Age | Results | |
| Parkinson disease | ||||
| (Peter Hagell, 2018) | “Classical test theory (CTT) and Rasch measurement theory (RMT).” | “The case of a clinical PD trial aiming to demonstrate ADLs improvements by using the ADLs section of the Unified PD Rating Scale (UPDRS) to measure ADLs outcomes is considered” | 675 patients. Mean age 63.8. | This work highlighted the key role that health outcomes play when it comes to clinical studies. |
| (Agnieszka Gorecka-Mazur et al, 2018) | “HRQoL and ADLs were assessed using the disease-specific and generic questionnaires” | “Authors aim to investigate the effects of subthalamic nucleus (STN) Deep brain stimulation (DBS) on HRQoL and ADLs in patients with PD.” | 25 patients Mean age 58.0. | “We reported significant early improvements (3 months) in the HRQoL and ADLs, and these benefits increased over time (6 months); however, further improvement between 6 and 12 months was nonsignificant. |
| (Francesca V. Lopez et al, 2018) | “Clinical severity of PD was assessed using the H&Y stage, UPDRS, and Schwab and England functional disability scores” | “Aims of the current study were to examine and determine the impact of cognitive, motor, and mood symptoms on Observed Tasks of Daily Living (OTDL-R) performance in PD.” | 19 patients Mean age −63.5 | “Patients with PD were significantly slower to complete the OTDL-R and performed worse on only the telephone use subtest, relative to the HC group.” |
| (Antonio Nicolas Puente, 2016) | “Comprehensive neuropsychological evaluation, The Lawton IADLs and Physical Self-Maintenance Scales-rater form, Executive functioning questionnaire.” | “Authors put forward the hypothesis that informant rated executive functioning (EF) may prove useful in providing incremental validity when forecasting IADLs that go above and beyond EF scores.” | 120. Mean age in years 65.1 | EF would add incremental validity beyond tests in explaining the performance of IADLs in patients with PD. |
| Alzheimers disease | ||||
| (Coralie Barbe et al, 2016) | Cross-sectional multicentre study HRQoL was gauged with DQoL (five domains: positive affect/humour, self-esteem, feeling of belonging, negative affect, and sense of aesthetics) | To outline elements linked to HRQoL as examined by DQoL in terms of those suffering with AD, with a focus on functional alterations. | 123. Mean age in years 82.0. | “Study shows that functional capacity, as measured using the items of the ADLs and IADLs scales, have an independent impact on HRQoL in AD patients.” |
| (Duru Asiret G., 2015) | “The Descriptive Information Form, The Daily Living Activities Observation Form, MMSE, GDS Chi-square, Mann–Whitney | “To investigate the effect of reminiscence therapy on cognition, depression, activities of daily living of institutionalised mild and moderate Alzheimer patients.” | AD - 31. Mean age in years 81.83 | At the end of reminiscence therapy sessions, an increase in cognition and decrease in depression were found statistically significant in the intervention group.’ |
| (Pyenson et al, 2019) | “Cost impact analysis of costs for up to 8 years before the year of death. Risk adjustment was performed at a beneficiary level using Medicare’s 2015 Hierarchical Condition Categories.” | “To compare total Medicare-covered (allowed) costs of patients with Alzheimer disease with the risk-adjusted costs of beneficiaries without dementia over their last years of life, using claims data.” | 384,008 Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries aged 69 years or older. | In their last 9 years of life, Alzheimer disease added about 11% to the average $17,000 per year Medicare cost for same-risk beneficiaries without dementia. |
| Other dementia | ||||
| (Clarissa M. Giebel et al, 2016) | Cognitive functioning-MMSE Everyday functioning - Katz Index of Independence in Activities of Daily Living QoL-AD, NPI-Q, ChCI, CSDD | This study aimed to examine every day actions of people with mild impairments, who were suffering from mild forms of the disease. A comparison was created to see what the results showed for AD and VaD alongside mixed dementia. | Total number of patients with specific dementia subtypes is 160. Mean age in years 66.1. | Performing activities in AD is better preserved than initiating activities. • Preparing a hot drink and dressing and washing oneself are amongst the best-preserved activities across mild AD, etc.’ |
| (Thais Bento Lima-Silva et al,2014) | “Direct Assessment of Functional Performance (DAFS-BR) and usual cognitive measures (MMSE, Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) scores. The Disability Assessment for Dementia was completed by caregivers.” | To compare direct and indirect assessments of activities of daily living (ADLs) in behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) and AD and their relationship with cognitive performance. | A total of 84 individuals, aged 55 or older; AD30, age 68.7;FTD 20, age 67.05; control 34, age 65.41 | Results suggested higher cognitive impairment among patients with AD yet higher functional impairment among patients with bvFTD.’ |
| (Clarissa M. Giebel et al, 2014) | Measures of cognition and QoL(MMSE, Katz Index of Independence in Activities of Daily Living, NPI-Q, (QoL-AD) rating scale) Using frequency, correlation and multiple regression analysis | The aim was to identify the tasks which were impossible to perform in each phase of dementia and detect their impact on a patient’s QoL. | AD 109 VD21 Mix 30. Mean age 83.7 | Explicit knowledge of daily functioning across mild, moderate, and severe dementia can guide daily activity interventions to address any impairment in the appropriate activity as early as possible.’ |
Summary of Selected Studies in Relation to Monitoring the Economic Burden in the Context of Chosen Dementia
| Study/Authors | Mentioned Costs | Methods and Goal of the Study | Dataset Summary and Results | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Direct | Indirect | Used Methods | Main Goal | Number of Patients, Avg. Age | Results | |
| Parkinson disease | ||||||
| (Gertrúd Tamás et al, 2014) | Outpatient consultation, diagnostics, drugs, other health care services, non-medical costs (transport, informal care) | Productivity loss | Cross-sectional survey cost calculation– societal perspective | Aim was to evaluate QoL alongside the expenses related to PD in Hungary to examine the links between the two. | 110 – patients 63.3 - mean age | COST (1 year) 6030 EUR/patient |
| (Weir Sharada et al, 2018) | Inpatient, outpatient hospital, accidents and emergency primary care, medication | NA | Retrospective population-based cohort study using linked data from the UK Clinical Practice Research Datalink and Hospital Episode Statistics databases.’ | This work outlined proper estimates of the costs attached to the care of patients with PD, as per the data collected on a routine basis. | 7060 – patients 72.6 - mean age | Mean cost of health care for such patients was approximately £5022 annually. |
| (Sturkenboom H. W. M. Ingrid et al, 2015) | Healthcare consults and medication, institutional care, aids and adaptations. | Informal care (home care, absence work) | Quality-adjusted life-year (QALY), net monetary benefit (NMB) statistic proved useful in analysing cost-efficacy. | “Home-based occupational therapy improves perceived performance in daily activities of people with (PD). The aim of the current study was to evaluate the cost-effectiveness of this intervention.” | 124 - patients 71.0 - average age | “Group differences in costs and health utilities 1302 euro (mean) The mean net monetary benefit of the intervention at a WTP value of EUR40,000.” |
| Alzheimers disease | ||||||
| (Jones W. Roy et al, 2017) | Direct medical costs | Informal care - opportunity cost approach | Cognitive function - MMSE, ADCS-ADLs score, Zarit Burden Interview (ZBI), cost - Utilisation in Dementia (RUD) instrument | Aim was to evaluate whether the decrease in cognitive and functionality was observed in community-dwelling patients suffering from mild AD and was connected with higher societal costs and caregiver burden and time results. | 494 – patients 77.1 - mean age | “Mean monthly cost of €1,400 to €2,254 in patients with functional decline and €1,778 in those with cognitive decline.” |
| (Catherine Reed et al, 2015) | Patient health care and social care costs, | Caregiver time | Study of community-living AD patients (GERAS) MMSE, BADLs, IADLs, Cost – opportunity cost approach | Authors attempted to find a more comprehensive picture and take on different facets of how a patient functions and how this impacts the caregiver outcomes and costs for those with AD. | 1497 - patients | Total societal costs for mild is €1325, for moderate €1884 and for severe €2908. |
| (Jens Peter Reese et al, 2011) | Hospital, outpatient treatment, ancillary therapy, special equipment, care, antidementia, total drugs | Indirect costs: a) retiring early, b) lack of ability to work, c) no employment, d) sick leave and e) a fall in labour time caused by AD | MMSE, NPI, GDS, structured questionnaire, QaL AD | “The study aims to report service use and costs for patients with Alzheimer’s disease (AD) and to explore the incremental influence of sociodemographic and illness-related determinants in ambulatory and inpatient settings”. | 395 – patients 80.2 – mean age. | Annual cost D25,500 for those in long-term care facilities and over D7,450 for those at home (EUR) |
| (Leicht H. et al, 2011) | Inpatient treatment, medical supplies and dental prostheses, outpatient physician treatment, pharmaceuticals, nursing home care | Informal care (Care and assistance provided by family or friends,) | In a cross-sectional study, costs of illness. | “To estimate net costs of dementia by degree of severity from a societal perspective.” | 176 – patients 85.3 – age | “Annual net costs of dementia by stage were approximately €15,000 (mild), €32,000 (moderate) and €42,000 (severe)” |
| (Linus Jonsson et al, 2006) | Medical care costs (inpatient care, outpatient care, pharmaceuticals) | Informal care (Lost production, lost leisure time) | Questionnaires, MMSE, NPI, opportunity cost methods | “This study aims to estimate the costs of formal and informal care and identity determinants of care costs.” | 272 – patients 75.9 - average age | “annual costs were on average SEK172 000 |
| (Gustavsson Anders et al, 2011) | Accommodation, hospitalisation, community care services | Informal care (Lost production, lost leisure time) | Interviews disease severity measures – MMSE, ADLs, NPI | “Authors aimed to identify what measures of disease severity are the most important predictors of societal costs of care and whether their relationship differs across countries.” | 1222 – patients 78 – mean age | “Community dwelling (severe USA:1837;Spain 1531; mild USA1204) Residential care (USA, severe: 5114;Swede 3698liber)” |
| (Gustavsson A., 2011) | Accommodation, hospitalisation, emergency care, outpatient care, medication, community care services | Informal care (Lost production, lost leisure time) | Costs of care – RUD Disease severity measures (MMSE, ADLs, Neuropsychiatric Inventory Questionnaire) | “To identify (a) the key resource items in a clinical trial setting and (b) how are they correlated with one another and with measures of disease severity.” | 1378 - patients 75.0 – average age | “The annual costs £9,308 (10,924; $13,353) in mild, £13,980 (16,408; $20,055) in moderate £19,957 (23,422; $28,629) in severe.“ |
| (Mark Belger et al, 2018) | “Patient health care (medications, hospitalisations and outpatient visits) social care (community care services, | Informal care (time spent giving care and missing work) | GERAS study design, MMSE, ADCS-ADLs and NPI, Opportunity cost approach | “To examine the costs of caring for community-dwelling patients with AD dementia in relation to the time to institutionalisation.” | 1495 - patients 77.6 - average age | “In the five years pre-institutionalisation, monthly total societal costs increased by more than £1000 (€1166 equivalent for 2010) from £1900 to £3160 and monthly total patient costs almost doubled from £770 to £1529.” |
| (Hajime Takechi et al, 2019) | Medical care, social care, visiting rehabilitation, day services | Informal care (time spent giving care and missing work) | This study involved 169 people with AD or MCI and who were observed for a certain period of time. | “The aim was to assess the cost of direct social support for AD under long-term care insurance in Japan.” | 169 patients – 81.3 average age | “Direct social support and costs rose considerably between people in all stages of dementia (P < 0.001).” |
| (Elizaveta Sopina et al, 2019) | Medical costs, hospital costs. | Informal care (Lost production, lost leisure time) | “Multiple logistic regressions to generate propensity scores to match 26,951 incident cases of AD with 26,951 people without AD.” | “Medical costs connected with AD are uncertain and often presented in a format inadequate for decision modelling. The authors tried to estimate long-term medical costs associated with AD and compared to the general population for use in decision modelling.” | 26,951 patients – 80.4 average age | “AD was connected with considerably higher costs, driven by medication and hospital costs, particularly at the time of diagnosis. Mean total medical cost was €4996 higher for AD than for the control group in the year of diagnosis.” |
| Other dementia | ||||||
| (Bernd Brüggenjürgen et al, 2015) | Number of hospitalisations, number of inpatient days, number of ambulatory physician visits, number of drugs used | Informal care (productivity loss of caregivers) | Cross-sectional analyses direct costs from the SHI payer perspective | “To assess the medical and economic differences between patients with and without diagnosed AD, VD)” | 18,745 – patients 79.8 - mean age | COST(1 year) AD: 7413–9207 controls: €3,378–3,850 |
| (Karlijn J. Joling et al, 2015) | “Ambulatory care day treatment and admissions medication” | “Home care and other support, Absenteeism, Intervention - Costs of the family meetings intervention including two individual and four family counselling sessions, and ad hoc counselling)” | “Interviews, Family Meetings (FAME) study, cost)-effectiveness of a family meeting intervention” | “This study aimed to identify predictors of the total societal costs in AD and dementia mixed patients and their informal caregivers.” | 192 – patients, 74.7 average age | “Societal costs 71,514 per person in year (informal care 59%)” |
| (Zwicker et al, 2019) | Drug costs and physician fees | Loss of income | “Retrospective, population-based cohort study of Ontario, Canada (2013–2015).” | “To explore the exploitation of health care service and costs for dead people with and without ALS in the last year of life.” | 1212 patients. 70 average age. | “Average cost of care in the last year of life was higher for those with ALS ($68,311.98 vs $55,773.48, p <0.001).” |
| (Jennings et al, 2019) | Hospitalisations, visits, drugs | Informal care (productivity loss of caregivers) | Quasiexperimental study to juxtapose the exploitation of health care and costs for 1083 Medicare individuals. | “To assess the exploitation of health care and cost results of a complex dementia care plan for Medicare individuals.” | 1083 patients. 82.1 average age. | “The total cost of care to Medicare, excluding programme costs, was $601 less per patient per quarter (95% CI, −$1198 to −$5).” |