New Risk Index Helps Predict Alzheimer's
Researchers
Say the Index Could Identify Older People at Risk for Dementia
By Bill Hendrick
Reviewed by Louise Chang, MD
May 13, 2009 -- Scientists say they've devised a risk
index that may help predict which people 65 and older are most likely to develop Alzheimer's disease.
The
risk index is a 15-point scale, and older people who score an eight or higher are deemed to be at high risk for developing
dementia, the researchers report in Neurology.
"The tool could also identify people who have no signs
of dementia but should be monitored closely, allowing them to begin treatment as soon as possible and potentially helping
them maintain their thinking and memory skills and quality of life longer," says Deborah E. Barnes, PhD, MPH, of the
University of California-San Francisco and the San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center.
Some of the items on
the risk scale are well-known risk factors for dementia, such as older age, low scores on tests of thinking and memory, and
having a gene that's been linked to Alzheimer's.
Other risk factors include being underweight, nondrinkers
of alcohol, people who've had bypass heart surgery, and people who are slow at performing physical tasks, like buttoning
a shirt.
Researchers examined 3,375 people, average age 76, with no evidence of dementia and followed them for six
years. During that period, 480 people (14%) developed dementia.
Researchers determined which risk factors were best
at predicting dementia and created a risk index with points assigned to the risk factors.
Fifty-six percent of those
with high scores on the index (eight or more points) developed dementia over the study period, compared to 23% of those with
moderate scores (4-7 points), and 4% with low scores (0-3 points).
The index, overall, correctly classified 88% of
the participants.
"A late life dementia index could have several important uses," the researchers write.
"It could be used to identify high-risk individuals for clinical trials and to target preventions toward those at greatest
risk."
It also could be used to identify older adults who should be monitored for symptoms of dementia. And it
might be used to reassure people whose risk is considered low or moderate, and give those at high risk information to better
prepare them to know when to seek help.
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