Zhong_2017_Alzheimer.Dis.Assoc.Disord_31_27

Reference

Title : The Potential Value of beta-Amyloid Imaging for the Diagnosis and Management of Dementia: A Survey of Clinicians - Zhong_2017_Alzheimer.Dis.Assoc.Disord_31_27
Author(s) : Zhong Y , Karlawish J , Johnson MK , Neumann PJ , Cohen JT
Ref : Alzheimer Disease & Associated Disorders , 31 :27 , 2017
Abstract :

We assessed the potential influence of beta-amyloid imaging on clinician diagnoses and management of patients with memory loss. We surveyed 315 clinicians, assigning each a vignette describing a hypothetical patient with symptoms of unexplained mild cognitive impairment, possible Alzheimer disease (AD), or young-onset dementia. Vignettes reported "positive," "negative," or no beta-amyloid imaging information. We assessed imaging's influence on diagnosis (AD contribution to symptoms), diagnostic confidence, and patient management. Compared with clinicians receiving no imaging, clinicians given positive imaging results more often attributed symptoms to AD [odds ratio (OR)=5.91; 95% confidence interval (CI), 1.25-27.97]; clinicians given negative imaging were less likely (OR=0.10; 95% CI, 0.04-0.21). Clinicians identifying AD as contributing to symptoms more often recommended acetylcholinesterase inhibitor (AChEI) (OR=18.59; 95% CI, 6.86-50.36) and N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor antagonists (OR=3.63; 95% CI, 1.78-7.39). We found that negative imaging reduced AChEI recommendations. Positive imaging reduced recommendation of beta-amyloid imaging for future patients. In conclusion, beta-amyloid imaging can influence diagnosis, prescriptions, and patient management.

PubMedSearch : Zhong_2017_Alzheimer.Dis.Assoc.Disord_31_27
PubMedID: 27819845

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Citations formats

Zhong Y, Karlawish J, Johnson MK, Neumann PJ, Cohen JT (2017)
The Potential Value of beta-Amyloid Imaging for the Diagnosis and Management of Dementia: A Survey of Clinicians
Alzheimer Disease & Associated Disorders 31 :27

Zhong Y, Karlawish J, Johnson MK, Neumann PJ, Cohen JT (2017)
Alzheimer Disease & Associated Disorders 31 :27