Title : Delusions and hallucinations are associated with worse outcome in Alzheimer disease - Scarmeas_2005_Arch.Neurol_62_1601 |
Author(s) : Scarmeas N , Brandt J , Albert M , Hadjigeorgiou G , Papadimitriou A , Dubois B , Sarazin M , Devanand D , Honig L , Marder K , Bell K , Wegesin D , Blacker D , Stern Y |
Ref : Archives of Neurology , 62 :1601 , 2005 |
Abstract :
BACKGROUND: Delusions and hallucinations are common in Alzheimer disease (AD) and there are conflicting reports regarding their ability to predict cognitive decline, functional decline, and institutionalization. According to all previous literature, they are not associated with mortality. OBJECTIVE: To examine whether the presence of delusions or hallucinations has predictive value for important outcomes in AD. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: A total of 456 patients with AD at early stages (mean Folstein Mini-Mental State Examination [MMSE] score of 21 of 30 at entry) were recruited and followed up semiannually for up to 14 years (mean, 4.5 years) in 5 university-based AD centers in the United States and Europe. Using the Columbia University Scale for Psychopathology in AD (administered every 6 months, for a total of 3266 visit-assessments, average of 7.2 per patient), the presence of delusions and hallucinations was extracted and examined as time-dependent predictors in Cox models. The models controlled for cohort effect, recruitment center, informant status, sex, age, education, a comorbidity index, baseline cognitive and baseline functional performance, behavioral symptoms, and use of neuroleptics and cholinesterase inhibitors. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Cognitive (Columbia MMSE score of < or =20/57 [approximate Folstein MMSE score of < or =10/30]), functional (Blessed Dementia Rating Scale [parts I and II] score of > or =10), institutionalization equivalent index, and death. |
PubMedSearch : Scarmeas_2005_Arch.Neurol_62_1601 |
PubMedID: 16216946 |
Scarmeas N, Brandt J, Albert M, Hadjigeorgiou G, Papadimitriou A, Dubois B, Sarazin M, Devanand D, Honig L, Marder K, Bell K, Wegesin D, Blacker D, Stern Y (2005)
Delusions and hallucinations are associated with worse outcome in Alzheimer disease
Archives of Neurology
62 :1601
Scarmeas N, Brandt J, Albert M, Hadjigeorgiou G, Papadimitriou A, Dubois B, Sarazin M, Devanand D, Honig L, Marder K, Bell K, Wegesin D, Blacker D, Stern Y (2005)
Archives of Neurology
62 :1601