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New criterion may
improve identification of Dementia Risk in
highly educated Older Adults
Newswise — A different cutoff point on an
existing mental function assessment may more
effectively assess the risk of dementia in
highly educated older adults, according to a
report in the July issue of Archives of
Neurology, one of the JAMA/Archives
journals.
The most commonly administered screening
test of cognitive (thinking, learning and
memory) function is known as the mini-mental
state examination (MMSE), according to
background information in the article.
“The MMSE is used to screen patients for
cognitive impairment, track changes in
cognitive functioning over time and often to
assess the effects of therapeutic agents on
cognitive function,” the authors write.
“Performance on the MMSE is moderated by
demographic variables, with scores
decreasing with advanced age and less
education.”
The maximum MMSE score is 30; a score of 24
or less is typically used to detect
individuals with cognitive dysfunction.
Sid E. O’Bryant, Ph.D., of the Texas Tech
University Health Sciences Center, and
colleagues reviewed the MMSE scores of 1,141
participants (93 percent white, average age
75.9 years) in the Mayo Clinic Alzheimer
Disease Research Center and Alzheimer
Disease Patient Registry who reported having
16 or more years of education.
These included 307 patients with dementia,
176 patients with mild cognitive impairment
and 658 control patients without dementia.
With the traditional cut score of 24 on the
MMSE, 89 percent of the participants were
accurately classified by dementia status.
This score had a sensitivity of 66 percent
and a specificity of 99 percent for the
detection of dementia, meaning that an
individual with a score of 23 or lower would
be correctly identified as having dementia
66 percent of the time and an individual
with score of 24 or higher would be
correctly diagnosed as not having dementia
99 percent of the time.
Raising the cut score to 27 changed the
sensitivity to 89 percent and the
specificity to 78 percent, correctly
classifying 90 percent of the participants.
“The current findings are not intended to
encourage the diagnosis of cognitive
impairment or dementia based on total MMSE
scores alone,” the authors write.
“Instead, these results provide
practitioners with revised criteria for
appropriate management of highly educated
older white patients.
Specifically, older patients who present
with memory complaints (reported by
themselves or others) who have attained a
college degree or higher level of education
and who score below 27 on the MMSE are at
increased risk of cognitive dysfunction and
dementia and should be referred for a
comprehensive evaluation, including formal
neuropsychological studies.”
The authors suggest that use of this new cut
point may help facilitate early detection of
dementia in highly educated individuals.
Timely treatment may be particularly
important in this population, since
individuals with more education tend to
decline and die more quickly after they are
diagnosed with Alzheimer’s disease, the
authors note.
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