Apathy and depression predict progression
from mild cognitive impairment to dementia
A new Mayo Clinic study found that apathy and depression
significantly predict an individual's progression from mild cognitive impairment
(MCI) to dementia, including Alzheimer's disease and Lewy body dementia. The study
was presented at the International Conference on Alzheimer's Disease in Honolulu
on July 11, 2010.
"An important area of study is the identification of biomarkers and clinical
predictors for the progression from normal cognition to mild cognitive impairment
and mild cognitive impairment to dementia," says Yonas E. Geda, M.D., a Mayo
Clinic neuropsychiatrist and the study's lead investigator. "We knew from
previous smaller studies that neuropsychiatric symptoms like depression, apathy
and agitation seem to predict progression from mild cognitive impairment to dementia,
so we set out to look at this hypothesis in a population-based setting with a
larger sample size."
As part of the Mayo Clinic Study of Aging, Dr. Geda and a team of Mayo Clinic
researchers identified 358 individuals with mild cognitive impairment and used
a questionnaire to collect data on depression and apathy. Then, they prospectively
followed individuals to the outcome of dementia (a median of 2.8 years). Among
87 individuals with depression, 30 (34.5 percent) developed dementia. Of the 271
individuals without depression, 59 (21.8 percent) developed dementia. Among 60
individuals with apathy, 22 (36.7 percent) developed dementia. Of the 298 individuals
without apathy, 67 (22.5 percent) developed dementia.
After adjusting for age, gender and education, the researchers found that the
individuals with mild cognitive impairment and depression had a 66 percent increased
risk of developing dementia than those individuals with mild cognitive impairment
without depression. Likewise, the individuals with mild cognitive impairment and
apathy had a 99 percent increased risk of developing dementia than those individuals
with mild cognitive impairment without apathy.
"These findings highlight the importance of thoroughly evaluating newly-diagnosed
patients with mild cognitive impairment for neuropsychiatric symptoms. The next
step is to conduct a study to find out if treatment of depression or apathy in
MCI may delay the onset of dementia," says Dr. Geda. "This delay could
have a huge impact on the quality of life for individual patients and their families,
not to mention the broad public health implications of delaying the societal and
economic burden of dementia. In fact, a previous biostatistics study from our
colleagues at Johns Hopkins indicated that delaying dementia by a mere one year
could reduce the prevalence of Alzheimer's disease by nearly 800,000 million fewer
cases in 2050."
Other members of the Mayo Clinic research teams included Rosebud Roberts, M.B.,
Ch.B; David Knopman, M.D.; Teresa Christianson; V. Shane Pankratz, Ph.D.; Bradley
Boeve, M.D.; Walter Rocca, M.D.; Robert Ivnik, Ph.D.; Eric Tangalos, M.D.; and
Ronald Petersen, M.D., Ph.D.
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