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ICD-10 MILD COGNITIVE DISORDER: ITS OUTCOME THREE YEARS LATER

✍ Scribed by H. CHRISTENSEN; A. S. HENDERSON; A. E. KORTEN; A. F. JORM; P. A. JACOMB; A. J. MACKINNON


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
1997
Tongue
English
Weight
117 KB
Volume
12
Category
Article
ISSN
0885-6230

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✦ Synopsis


Objective. The aims were to (i) report the outcome of mild cognitive disorder (MCD) 3.6 years after initial interview and diagnosis; (ii) identify predictors of new cases of MCD. The hypotheses were that (i) persons with MCD are more likely to develop dementia than those without MCD; (ii) symptoms of anxiety or depression predict MCD caseness at follow-up.

Design. Longitudinal cohort study.

Setting. Community of elderly people (age 70±97 years).

Participants. 612 of 897 elderly subjects (mean 76 years) were reinterviewed. Of the 36 MCD cases originally identi®ed, 25 were available at follow-up. 24 incident cases of MCD were identi®ed.

Main outcome measures. ICD-10 dementia, DSM-III-R dementia, ICD-10 mild cognitive disorder diagnoses made by the Canberra Interview for the Elderly, tests of anxiety, depression, neuroticism and cognitive performance.

Main results.Of the original 25 MCD cases available at follow-up, two had a diagnosis of MCD, and three had a diagnosis of both ICD-10 and DSM-III-R dementia. The prevalence of MCD and DSM-III-R dementia at follow-up was no greater for MCD cases diagnosed at initial interview than in normal subjects at initial interview. There was, however, an increased prevalence of ICD-10 dementia among original MCD cases. At initial interview and at followup MCD cases were more anxious and depressed but had similar cognitive performance to normals. For incident cases of MCD the only signi®cant predictor was age.

Conclusions. MCD cannot be seen to be a speci®c forerunner of dementia. Those with a diagnosis of MCD are distinguished more by their anxiety, depression and neuroticism than by their cognitive de®cits.