| Literature DB >> 35029755 |
Simone Brefka1,2,3, Gerhard Wilhelm Eschweiler4,5, Dhayana Dallmeier6,7,8, Michael Denkinger9,6,7, Christoph Leinert9,6,7.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Delirium is a frequent psychopathological syndrome in geriatric patients. It is sometimes the only symptom of acute illness and bears a high risk for complications. Therefore, feasible assessments are needed for delirium detection. OBJECTIVE AND METHODS: Rapid review of available delirium assessments based on a current Medline search and cross-reference check with a special focus on those implemented in acute care hospital settings.Entities:
Keywords: 4As test; Assessment; Confusion assessment method; Practicability; Screening
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35029755 PMCID: PMC8921069 DOI: 10.1007/s00391-021-02003-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Z Gerontol Geriatr ISSN: 0948-6704 Impact factor: 1.292
Comparison of ICD-10 and ICD-11 for delirium diagnosis
| ICD-10—F05 Delirium not induced by alcohol and other psychoactive substances | ICD-11—6D70 Neurocognitive disorders: delirium |
|---|---|
An etiologically nonspecific organic cerebral syndrome characterized by concurrent disturbances of consciousness and at least two of the following domains: attention, perception, thinking, memory, psychomotor behavior, emotion, or sleep-wake schedule. The duration is variable and the degree of severity ranges from mild to very severe | Delirium is characterized by: 1. disturbed attention (i.e., reduced ability to direct, focus, sustain, and shift attention) and 2. awareness (i.e., reduced orientation to the environment) that develops over a short period of time and tends to fluctuate during the course of a day, accompanied by other cognitive impairment such as: memory deficit, disorientation, or impairment in language, visuospatial ability, or perception. Disturbance of the sleep-wake cycle (reduced arousal of acute onset or total sleep loss with reversal of the sleep-wake cycle) may also be present. The symptoms are attributable to a disorder or disease not classified under mental and behavioral disorders or to substance intoxication or withdrawal or to a medication |
Fig. 1Confusion assessment method (CAM) algorithm. Criteria 1 and 2 as well as either criterion 3 or criterion 4 must be present for a CAM-based diagnosis of delirium
Fig. 2Study selection flow chart (asterisk: number of studies included and sum of identified delirium detection tools differ as for some tools data were extracted from two or more sources)
List of the 15 selected delirium detection tools and the corresponding characteristics
| Delirium detection tools | ||||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Abbreviation (full name) | Target patient group/investigator (I) | Screening vs. monitoring | Scoring | Average duration | Psychometric properties | Reference | Critical appraisal | |||
| Sens | Spec | Others | RS | |||||||
| Confusion assessment method (CAM) Family | ||||||||||
| 3D-CAM (3-minute diagnostic CAM) | General medicine patients ≥ 75 years ( (+ collateral history) I: trained physician/nurse | Screening 20 items (10 for patient interview, 10 observational) + 2 optional questions for collateral history All items referring to 4 core features 1. Acute onset and/or fluctuating course 2. Inattention 3. Disorganized thinking 4. Altered level of consciousness | CAM algorithm: 1 + 2 + (3 or 4) positive = suspected delirium | 3 min | Total sample: | – | DSM-IV criteria | [ | Good structure as guidance; operationalization of core features; less interviewer training required | |
| 0.95 | 0.94 | |||||||||
| Patients with dementia: | ||||||||||
| 0.96 | 0.86 | |||||||||
| Patients without dementia: | ||||||||||
| 0.93 | 0.96 | |||||||||
| CAM (short form) | Older patients ≥ 65 years ( + collateral history I: trained lay rater or clinician | Screening 4 items on core features (see 3D-CAM) | CAM algorithm: 1 + 2 + (3 or 4) positive = suspected delirium | 5–10 min | 0.94–1.00 | 0.90–0.95 | IRR: presence/absence of delirium 100%, k = 1.0; assessing 4 core features 93%, k = 0.81 | Geriatric psychiatrist rating after comprehensive assessment | [ | Professional training required; poor sensitivity when CAM is conducted by untrained/insufficiently trained rater |
| CAM-ICU (CAM for the intensive care unit) | Adult ICU patients ( + collateral history I: trained lay rater or clinician | Screening 8 items on core features (see 3D-CAM) | CAM algorithm: 1 + 2 + (3 or 4) positive = suspected delirium | < 5 min | Total sample: | IRR: k = 0.95 | DSM-IV criteria | [ | Eligible for intubated ICU patients; operationalization of core features | |
| 0.95–1.00 | 0.89–0.93 | |||||||||
| Patients ≥ 65 years: | ||||||||||
| 0.90–1.00 | 0.83–1.00 | |||||||||
| Patients with dementia: | ||||||||||
| 1.00 | 1.00 | |||||||||
| FAM-CAM (Family CAM) | Community-dwelling older people ≥ 65 years with dementia ( Collateral history (caregiver/informant) I: trained rater/clinician | Screening 11 items | CAM algorithm: 1 + 2 + (3 or 4) positive = suspected delirium | 5–10 min | 0.88 | 0.98 | Overall agreement with CAM 96% | CAM | [ | Collateral history only |
| mCAM-ED (modified CAM for the emergency department) | ED patients ≥ 65 years ( (+ collateral history if available) I: trained clinician | Screening Two-step-rating: 1. MOTYB to identify inattention 2. If inattention present → MSQ for identifying cognitive impairment, Comprehension subtest of CTD for identifying disorganized thinking | Modified CAM algorithm: 1a (acute onset) AND 1b (fluctuating course) + 2 + (3 or 4) positive = diagnosed delirium, 1a OR 1b + 2 + (3 or 4) positive = suspected delirium | < 5 min | Total sample: | – | DSM-IV criteria | [ | Two-step approach; operationalization of core features | |
| 0.90 | 0.98 | |||||||||
| Patients with dementia: | ||||||||||
| 0.91 | 0.87 | |||||||||
| Patients without dementia: | ||||||||||
| 0.89 | 0.99 | |||||||||
| UB-CAM (Ultra-brief-CAM) | General medicine patients ≥ 75 years ( (+ collateral history) I: trained physician/nurse | Screening 2–15 items UB‑2, in the case of an incorrect answer followed by a modified 3D-CAM (assessment of each CAM feature is stopped after one incorrect answer or positive observation item of that feature) | CAM algorithm: 1 + 2 + (3 or 4) positive = suspected delirium | 2 min | 0.93 | 0.95 | – | 3D-CAM | [ | Retrospective simulation based on 3D-CAM and UB‑2 data of two studies |
| 4AT (4 As test) | Acute care and rehabilitation patients ≥ 70 years ( + collateral history I: untrained geriatrician | Screening 4 items: alertness AMT‑4 Attention (MOTYB) Acute change or fluctuation | Score 0–12 0 = no CI or delirium 1–3 = possible CI ≥ 4 = possible delirium | < 5 min | 0.90 | 0.84 | AUC 0.89–0.93 | DSM-IV criteria | [ | Information on acute change/fluctuation not mandatory for delirium diagnosis; no special training required; includes MOTYB |
| BCS (bedside confusion scale) | Palliative patients ( I: rater (no requirements) | Screening Tool 2 items: psychomotor activity + MOTYB | Score 0–5 Cut-off: ≥ 2 = suspected delirium | 2 min | 1.0 | 0.85 | – | CAM | [ | Includes MOTYB |
| DOS/DOSS (delirium observation screening scale) | Van Gemert: older patients ≥ 70 years ( Koster: cardiac surgery patients ≥ 45 years ( + collateral history (25-items version) I: nurse | Screening + Monitoring Severity scoring included Original version: 25 items Revised version: 13 items | Score 0–13 Final score = (score shift 1 + score shift 2 + score shift 3) / 3 Cut-off: ≥ 3 = suspected delirium | 5 min (13-items version) | Van Gemert: | – | DSM-IV criteria | [ | Suitable tool for periodical (once per shift) delirium screening by nurses | |
| 0.89 | 0.88 | |||||||||
| Koster: | ||||||||||
| 1.00 | 0.97 | |||||||||
| DTS (delirium triage screen) | Adult patients ( I: trained clinician or lay rater | Screening 2 items | Scoring: First item (altered level of consciousness) positive = screening positive, specific delirium assessment required (recommended tool: bCAM). Negative first item is followed by second item (spelling “LUNCH” backwards), > 1 error = screening positive, specific delirium assessment required | < 1 min | DTS alone: | IRR: k = 0.79 | DSM-IV-TR criteria | [ | Two-step approach (combination with specific delirium assessment recommended) | |
| 0.98 | 0.55 | |||||||||
| DTS + bCAM: | ||||||||||
| 0.78–0.84 | 0.96–0.97 | |||||||||
| MOTYB (months of the year backwards) | Adult patients, median age 69 years ( I: trained medical staff/nurse | Screening Months of the year forward, starting with January, followed by MOTYB, starting with December | At least “July” has to be reached without any error (omission or wrong month), error before July = suspected delirium | < 2 min | All participants (17–95 years): | – | DSM-IV criteria | [ | Suitable as a quick and easy screening test for delirium Two-step approach recommended: positive result should be followed by specific delirium assessment | |
| 0.83 | 0.91 | |||||||||
| Participants > 69 years: | ||||||||||
| 0.84 | 0.90 | |||||||||
ED patients ≥ 65 years ( | Screening MOTYB, starting with December, ending with January | 1 point for each error; ≥ 8 points = suspected delirium | 0.95 | 0.94 | – | DSM-IV criteria | [ | |||
| MOTYB, starting with December | All months named correctly at least from December to September September is not reached without error = suspected delirium | 0.90 | 0.89 | |||||||
| mRASS (modified Richmond agitation sedation scale) | Older patients ≥ 65 years ( I: trained nurse | Screening + Monitoring Modified version of the RASS: Step 1: question “Describe how you are feeling today” Step 2: scoring the mRASS containing the additional aspect of attention | Screening: Any abnormal score (≠ 0) = suspected delirium Monitoring: any change to prior score | < 1 min | Used as a single instrument for delirium screening: | – | DSM-IV criteria | [ | Suitable instrument to identify incident delirium (daily administration) | |
| 0.64 | 0.93 | |||||||||
| Used as a monitoring instrument to detect change: | ||||||||||
| 0.74 | 0.92 | |||||||||
| Nu-DESC (nursing delirium screening scale) | Adult patients ( /nurse (who observed patient) I: trained clinician/nurse or lay rater | Screening + Monitoring Severity scoring included 5 items | Each item scored 0–2 (0 = absent, 1 = mild, 2 = severe) Total score 0–10 Cut-off: ≥ 2 = suspected delirium | < 2 min | 0.86 | 0.87 | – | CAM | [ | Suitable tool for periodical (once per day) delirium screening by nurses Subjective component of scoring a symptom “mild” or “severe” |
| SQiD (single question in delirium) | Patients with cancer, age 30–79 years ( Collateral history (friend/relative/caregiver) I: trained clinician or lay rater | One question: “Do you feel that … (patient’s name) has been more confused lately?” | Answer “yes” or “no” “Yes” = suspected delirium | < 1 min | Vs. psychiatrist interview | [ | Suitable as a quick and easy delirium screening question for caregiver interview Two-step approach recommended: positive result should be followed by specific delirium assessment of patient | |||
| 0.80 | 0.71 | – | – | |||||||
| Vs. CAM: | ||||||||||
| 0.67 | 0.67 | – | – | |||||||
| Vs. MMSE: | ||||||||||
| 0.50 | 0.59 | – | – | |||||||
Patients ≥ 75 years ( | 0.77 | 0.51 | – | DSM-IV criteria | [ | |||||
| UB‑2 (ultra-brief 2‑item screener) | Patients ≥ 75 years ( I: trained clinician | Screening 2 items: naming the current day of the week + MOTYB | Any incorrect answer, omission of one or more months or no answer/answer “I do not know” = suspected delirium | < 2 min | Sens 0.93 | Spec 0.64 | – | DSM-IV criteria | [ | Suitable as a quick and easy screening test for delirium Two-step approach recommended: positive result should be followed by specific delirium assessment |
AMT-4 abbreviated mental test 4, AUC area under the curve, CAM confusion assessment method, CI cognitive impairment, CTD cognitive test for delirium, DSM-IV Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders IV, ED emergency department, ICC intraclass correlation coefficient, ICU intensive care unit, IRR interrater reliability, k kappa, MMSE mini mental state examination, MOTYB months of the year backwards, n number, RS reference standard, Sens sensitivity, Spec specificity, MSQ mental status questionnaire