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Severe
COPD may lead to cognitive impairment
Severe chronic obstructive pulmonary disease
(COPD) is associated with lower cognitive
function in older adults, according to
research from Mount Sinai School of
Medicine.
Researchers compared cognitive performance
in over 4,150 adults with and without COPD
and found that individuals with severe COPD
had significantly lower cognitive function
than those without, even after controlling
for confounding factors such as
comorbidities.
The results were published in the July 15
issue of the American Journal of Respiratory
and Critical Care Medicine.
"Our findings should raise awareness that
adults with severe COPD are at greater risk
for developing cognitive impairment, which
may make managing their COPD more
challenging, and will likely further worsen
their general health and quality of life,"
wrote lead author of the study, William W.
Hung, M.D., M.P.H., assistant professor at
Mount Sinai School of Medicine.
Patients with COPD may experience periods of
hypoxia—low oxygen levels—that might lead to
brain abnormalities that could reduce
cognitive capacity.
Alternatively, hypoxia may cause or
exacerbate diseases that are characterized
by cognitive impairment, such as Alzheimer's
disease.
Although past studies have observed a higher
rate of cognitive impairment among adults
with COPD, the relationship has not been
formally tested longitudinally in large
populations until now.
"We wanted to determine whether the observed
relationship between COPD and cognitive
impairment was, in fact, something we could
document over time, and if so, we wanted to
determine whether the degree to which it
occurred was significant," said Dr. Hung.
To do so, Dr. Hung and colleagues obtained
data from the Health and Retirement Study, a
national prospective biennial survey of
Americans 50 and older.
They included data from survey takers who
had undergone cognitive testing in 1996 and
again in 1998, 2000 or 2002.
Of the 4,150 individuals ultimately
included, 492 had COPD, and of those, about
one-third (153) had severe disease.
Using a 35-point cognition scale, the
researchers found that scores among all
patients with COPD declined on average by
one point over the six-year period between
1996 and 2002.
After further classifying those with COPD as
having severe or nonsevere disease, the
researchers found that severity and
cognitive decline were linked.
Even after controlling for sociodemographic
characteristics and other confounding
factors, the mean cognition scores for those
with severe COPD were significantly lower
(0.9 points; p=0.01) than those without COPD.
"These objective measures of cognition used
in survey research do correlate with
functional impairment," said Dr. Hung. In
particular, executive functions that require
greater cognitive ability, such as handling
money and medications, are more poorly
performed at greater levels of cognitive
impairment.
Extrapolating
from past research using the same cognitive
test, Dr. Hung and colleagues suggest that
their findings would likely be associated
with a 22 percent increase in the mean
number of difficulties the severe COPD
population would experience with daily
tasks.
"While this number may not appear to be of
major concern on the individual level, on a
population level, it is roughly equivalent
to nearly a quarter of severe COPD patients
experiencing difficulty with a basic life
skill," said Dr. Hung.
"In this regard, these findings have serious
implications. Often patients with cognitive
difficulties, if undetected and untreated,
have lower adherence to their treatment and
follow-up regimens, and as a consequence may
deteriorate more rapidly and have worse
health outcomes."
In conclusion, Dr. Hung suggested that
physicians and other clinical staff managing
the care of these patients should be aware
of their increased risk for cognitive
decline and the greater needs and challenges
associated with caring for cognitively
impaired older adults.
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