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Alzheimers Disease The Challenge of Early Diagnosis

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Title: Alzheimers Disease The Challenge of Early Diagnosis


1
Alzheimers Disease The Challenge of Early
Diagnosis
  • Overview and Introduction

2
Benefits of Early Diagnosis and Treatment of
Alzheimers Disease
  • Alzheimers disease can be diagnosed
    approximately 90 of the time with a general
    medical and psychiatric evaluation1,2
  • Early diagnosis has many advantages3,4
  • Allows time for planning
  • Empowers the patients to make treatment decisions
    early on
  • Facilitates caregiver participation
  • May slow the progression of symptoms2
  • Offers the patient potential for greater
    functioning and independence2,3
  • Can help ease the stress for caregivers2,3

Sources 1. Small GW, et al. JAMA.
19972781363-1372. 2. National
Institute on Aging. National Institutes of
Health 2000. NIH publication 00-4859l-62. 3.
Doraiswamy PM, et al. J Clin Psychiatry.
199859(suppl 13)6-18. 4. Knopman DS. In
Early Diagnosis of Alzheimers Disease. Totowa,
NJ Humana Press, Inc 2000298.
3
Discussion Points
  • Dementia is underrecognized (even with
  • behavioral symptoms) and undertreated
  • 67.7 of residents have dementia
  • Of those with dementia
  • 73 were adequately evaluated
  • 52 were adequately treated
  • 70 had clinically significant behavioral
    symptoms
  • Used 262 min/d of staff time vs no dementia 126
    min/d (Plt.005)

The results are based on a randomized cohort of
assisted living (AL) residents of 22 randomly
selected AL facilities in Baltimore and 7
Maryland counties. Source Rosenblatt A, et al.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2004521618-1625.
4
Barriers to Early Diagnosis
  • Stigma
  • First-degree relatives of AD patients reluctant
    to approve cognitive status examination
  • Those of patients with more behavioral problems
    show greater reluctance
  • Misconceptions
  • Perception of uselessness of examination
  • Perception of limited treatment options
  • Early Stages
  • Patients maintain social skills in mild stages

Source Werner P, Heinik J. Int J Geriatr
Psychiatry. 200419479-486.
5
Barriers to Early Diagnosis (cont)
  • Failure to Recognize the Importance of
  • Cognitive/Functional Changes
  • Racial Barriers
  • Racial bias in screening tools
  • Duality of respect for the patient
    normalization
  • Cultural ignorance or insensitivity

Source Cloutterbuck J, et al. Dementia.
20032221-243.
6
Discussion Points
  • Dementia Screening Tools Effect of Ethnicity
  • Brief screening tests often incorrectly classify
    African Americans with dementia (42) compared
    to Caucasians (6)
  • The specificity of standardized cognitive
    assessments for dementia is particularly bad for
    African Americans
  • Comparison of the utility of the Clock Drawing
    Test (CDT), Cognitive Abilities Screening
    Instrument, and MMSE
  • All tests were affected by education level
  • CDT was most sensitive to poorly educated
    non-English speakers

Sources Stephenson J. JAMA. 2001286779-780.
Lampley-Dallas VT. J Natl Med Assoc.
200193323-328. Fillenbaum G, et al. J Clin
Epidemiol. 199043651-660. Borson S, et al.
J Gerontol A Biol Sci Med Sci. 199954M534-M540.
7
Discussion Points
  • Ethnic Differences in Knowledge and Perception of
    AD
  • Elderly have misperceptions about the prevalence,
    etiology, diagnosis, and financial coverage for
    AD treatments
  • Older Hispanic and Asian adults frequently
    consider AD a contagious but curable disease
  • Hispanic, Asian, and African Americans more often
    consider AD a form of insanity
  • Education levels partially explain differences in
    AD knowledge between Caucasians and Hispanics
  • For Asians, the number of years speaking English
    is correlated with better knowledge of AD

Source Ayalon L, et al. Int J Geriatr
Psychiatry. 20041951-57.
8
Barriers to Early Diagnosis (cont)
  • Barriers associated with PCPs
  • Differential diagnosis
  • Vascular dementia, frontotemporal dementia,
    Lewy body dementia
  • Comorbid conditions
  • Differentiating dementia, delirium, and
    depression
  • Time
  • 1 hour required for diagnosis, but only 15
    minutes reimbursed
  • Knowledge of appropriate reimbursement codes
  • Overabundance of tests

9
Discussion PointsVascular Dementia (VaD) - Key
Elements
  • Cognitive impairment caused by cerebrovascular
    disease or cerebrovascular accident
  • Mixed dementia VaD AD
  • Stairstep progression of illness
  • May have motor impairment early in the course of
    illness
  • Care Notes
  • Treat hypertension, diabetes, ? lipids
  • May be associated with severe or refractory
    depression
  • Accommodate hemiplegia in interactions with
    staff/environment

Source Black SE. Postgrad Med.
2005117(1)15-16,19-25.
10
Discussion PointsDementia With Lewy Bodies - Key
Elements
  • Wide fluctuations in cognition, responsiveness,
    and function
  • Vivid visual hallucinations and paranoid
    delusions
  • Parkinsonism occurs early
  • Care notes
  • Some antipsychotics will cause severe
    parkinsonism at low doses
  • Quetiapine, aripiprazole, or clozapine may be
    tolerated best
  • Cholinesterase inhibitors are helpful
  • Levodopa and Parkinsons disease medications have
    limited effectiveness for movement disorders

Sources McKeith IG, et al. Neurology.
1996471113-1124. McKeith IG,
et al. Neurology. 199953902-905.
11
Discussion PointsFrontotemporal Dementia - Key
Elements
  • Frontal lobe dementia, Picks disease
  • Earlier age of onset than AD
  • Gradual decline
  • Early problems with memory and language
    expression
  • Prominent personality changessocially
    inappropriate, disinhibited, and compulsive
    (sexualized, eating) behaviors often observed
  • Care notes
  • Cholinesterase inhibitors not very effective
  • Safe environment for harmful compulsive behaviors

Source McKhann GM, et al. Arch Neurol.
2001581803-1809.
12
Alzheimers Disease
  • Multiple cognitive deficits, with both memory
    impairment and 1 or more of the following
    deficits
  • Aphasia (language)
  • Apraxia (learned motor skills)
  • Agnosia (visuospatial/sensory)
  • Executive functioning (planning, insight
    anticipation)
  • Impairment in social or occupational
    functioning, representing a significant decline
    from a previous level of functioning
  • Gradual onset and progressive cognitive decline

Adapted from American Psychiatric Association.
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
Disorders. 4th ed. Washington,
DC American Psychiatric Association
1994142-143.
13
Overcoming Barriers to AD Diagnosis
  • Time
  • Schedule high-risk patients at end of day
  • AD does not have to be diagnosed in a single
    visit
  • Reimbursement
  • Know appropriate codes for AD diagnosis and for
    extra time
  • Coexisting illnesses
  • AD treatments may permit sustained
    self-management of other illnesses
  • Depression
  • Evaluate patients using Geriatric Depression
    Scale (15 questions)
  • Screening tools
  • Start slowly in gathering information, eg, MMSE
    (10-15 minutes) and CDT (1-5 minutes)
  • FAQ 10 questions completed by family

14
Targeted Screening
  • Patients at least 65 years of age, when clinical
    presentation suggests the possibility of
    dementia (eg, forgetfulness, poor hygiene, poor
    compliance)
  • All patients at least 80 years of age, with
    regular frequency

Sources Kaiser Permanente Care Management
Institute. Guidelines for the diagnosis and
management of dementia in
primary care. Available at
http//members.kaiserpermanente.org/kpweb/pdf/feat
ure/247clinicalpracguide/CMI_
DementiaGuideline_public_web_020604.pdf. Accessed
August 17, 2005. Knopman DS, et
al. Neurology. 2001561143-1153.
15
Discussion Points
  • Is there a relationship between mild cognitive
    impairment (MCI) and AD? (16 of MCI patients
    convert to AD per year)
  • How do we differentiate MCI from AD?
  • Government recommendation not to screen (Agency
    for Healthcare Research and Quality)

16
The Case for UniversalCognitive Screening
  • Memory complaints are common and can be
    associated with subsequent dementia
  • Early dementia symptoms can be difficult to
    recognize
  • Cognitive impairment affects how medical care is
    provided
  • Management (and costs) of other diseases
  • Follow through with medical recommendations
  • Prevention of complications

17
Discussion Points
  • Which screening tools do you recommend?
  • A dialogue on the utility of screening tools
  • Educational preceptorshipwarning signs and
    public awareness
  • Community
  • Doctors
  • Consumers
  • Alzheimers Association

18
Dementia Diagnostic Process
  • General screen
  • Signs of acute/chronic disease how well
    controlled?
  • Common conditions
  • Weight loss, dehydration, subnutrition
  • Include obstructive sleep apnea, insomnia,
    depression
  • Neurologic screen
  • Vascular or Parkinsons dementia, frontal signs
  • Gait, balance, and falls
  • Neuropathy
  • Laboratory screen
  • Vitamin B12 deficiency, hypothyroidism
  • Associated problems, secondary complications,
    andadditional causes
  • Brain structural screen
  • Noncontrast CT or MRI
  • Surgical and vascular lesions

19
Evaluation of the AD Patient
  • In approximately 90 of patients who have AD,
    the diagnosis can be made on the basis of
  • Detailed medical history obtained from the
    patient and a reliable informant
  • Medical examination
  • Mental status examination
  • A 15-minute office visit is insufficient for
    fully evaluating the AD patient. For patients
    seen regularly, a 3-stage assessment may be more
    appropriate

Source Cefalu C, Grossberg GT. Diagnosis and
Management of Dementia. American Family
Physician Monograph, No. 2. Leawood, Kan
American Academy of Family Physicians 2001.


20
The Office History
  • Memory impairment repetitive trouble
    remembering recent conversations, events,
    appointments frequently misplaces objects
  • Executive impairment deterioration of complex
    task performance decreased ability to solve
    problems impaired driving
  • Drugs alcohol, prescriptions, over-the-counter
    (OTC) medications
  • Focal motor or sensory neurologic symptoms

21
Evaluation of the AD Patient (cont)
First Visit
  • Take comprehensive history
  • Medical history, medications (including OTC drug
    use)
  • Interview immediate family member/caregiver
  • If time permits and patient is cooperative,
    perform MMSE
  • Assess family needs and caregiver stress

Source Cefalu C, Grossberg GT. Diagnosis and
Management of Dementia. American Family
Physician Monograph, No. 2. Leawood, Kan
American Academy of Family Physicians 2001.


22
Evaluation of the AD Patient (cont)
Second Visit
  • CBC, electrolytes, LFTs, TSH, B12, folate, UA,
    EKG, HIV, VDRL, ESR, homocysteine
  • Neuroimaging
  • Perform MMSE if not performed on first visit
  • Reassess family needs and caregiver stress
  • Consider neuropsychological testing

CBC complete blood count LFTs liver function
tests TSH thyroid-stimulating hormone UA
unstable angina EKG electrocardiogram HIV
human immunodeficiency virus VDRL Venereal
Disease Research Laboratory test ESR
erythrocyte sedimentation rate. Source Cefalu
C, Grossberg GT. Diagnosis and Management of
Dementia. American Family Physician
Monograph, No. 2. Leawood, Kan American Academy
of Family Physicians 2001.
23
Evaluation of the AD Patient (cont)
Third Visit
  • Review laboratory findings and resultsof testing
  • Discuss treatment options, follow-up plans for
    patient
  • Readdress family and caregiver needs

Source Cefalu C, Grossberg GT. Diagnosis and
Management of Dementia. American Family
Physician Monograph, No. 2. Leawood, Kan
American Academy of Family Physicians 2001.



24
Discussion Points
  • What Is the Place for Imaging?
  • Noncontrast CT or MRI scan in the initial
    evaluation is appropriate (American Academy of
    Neurology Guideline)
  • The use of positron emission tomography
  • Value of imaging is to rule out other forms of
    intracranial pathology that may be contributing
    to cognitive change or for unusual presentations
  • Rapid onset (duration lt3 months), subdural
    hematoma, cerebral neoplasms, head trauma,
    history of cerebrovascular accident(s), seizures,
    new-onset urinary or fecal incontinence, abnormal
    gait, postural instability, focal signs, visual
    field deficit, headaches, suspect malignant tumor

Sources American Academy of Neurology.
Neurology. 2001561133-1142.
American Academy of Neurology. Neurology.
2001561143-1153.
25
Practical Consequences of Improved Diagnostic
Accuracy
  • Accurate diagnostic information and education
    reduce family/caregiver burden
  • Decreased likelihood of repeated diagnostic
    assessments and testing
  • AD label improves caregiver attitudes
  • Information about the disease improves quality of
    life for family/patient and delays nursing home
    placement

Sources Mittelman M, et al. JAMA.
19962761725-1731. Wadley
V, et al. J Gerontol B Psychol Sci Soc Sci.
200156P244-P252.
26
Stages of Alzheimers Disease
27
Summary
  • Marked changes in memory are not a normal part of
    aging and may signal a developing dementia
  • Universal screening for AD is important
  • Effective diagnosis and management take time
  • Three separate visits may be required
  • It is important to recognize and overcome the
    barriers to early diagnosis of AD
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