Patterns and persistence of behavioural and psychological symptoms in those with cognitive impairment: the importance of apathy

Objective To study the stability and emergence of a range of behavioural and psychological symptoms (BPS), their association with mortality and the effect of covariates on these transitions in a population-based study of cognitively impaired older people with a long follow-up period and large sampl...

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Main Authors: van der Linde, Rianne M., Matthews, Fiona E., Dening, Tom, Brayne, Carol
Format: Article
Published: Wiley 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33569/
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author van der Linde, Rianne M.
Matthews, Fiona E.
Dening, Tom
Brayne, Carol
author_facet van der Linde, Rianne M.
Matthews, Fiona E.
Dening, Tom
Brayne, Carol
author_sort van der Linde, Rianne M.
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Objective To study the stability and emergence of a range of behavioural and psychological symptoms (BPS), their association with mortality and the effect of covariates on these transitions in a population-based study of cognitively impaired older people with a long follow-up period and large sample size, with a particular focus on apathy. Methods Data were from a population-based, longitudinal cohort study of ageing. Interviews were conducted at 0, 2, 6, 8 and 10 years with 3626 participants aged 65+. The persistence of 11 BPS and their association with mortality in those with cognitive impairment (MMSE 25 or below) was investigated using multi-state models, allowing us to take into account estimations of the probability of transitions that occurred in the time between interviews. Results Most BPS were persistent. Apathy was one of the most stable symptoms; in those with apathy, the probability of still having apathy after 1 year is 62%. Apathy, sleep problems, depression, irritability and wandering were most likely to develop. BPS are associated with mortality; in those with apathy, mortality is 3.1 times more likely than in those without apathy. Low cognitive function and dementia were associated with emergence of new symptoms. Conclusions This population-based, multi-centre study with a follow-up period of 10 years showed that BPS are associated with mortality and most symptoms are persistent. Apathy was characterised by a high prevalence, a high persistence and a strong association with mortality, and has a negative impact on disability, management of other disease and caregiver burden.
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spelling nottingham-335692020-05-04T17:40:14Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33569/ Patterns and persistence of behavioural and psychological symptoms in those with cognitive impairment: the importance of apathy van der Linde, Rianne M. Matthews, Fiona E. Dening, Tom Brayne, Carol Objective To study the stability and emergence of a range of behavioural and psychological symptoms (BPS), their association with mortality and the effect of covariates on these transitions in a population-based study of cognitively impaired older people with a long follow-up period and large sample size, with a particular focus on apathy. Methods Data were from a population-based, longitudinal cohort study of ageing. Interviews were conducted at 0, 2, 6, 8 and 10 years with 3626 participants aged 65+. The persistence of 11 BPS and their association with mortality in those with cognitive impairment (MMSE 25 or below) was investigated using multi-state models, allowing us to take into account estimations of the probability of transitions that occurred in the time between interviews. Results Most BPS were persistent. Apathy was one of the most stable symptoms; in those with apathy, the probability of still having apathy after 1 year is 62%. Apathy, sleep problems, depression, irritability and wandering were most likely to develop. BPS are associated with mortality; in those with apathy, mortality is 3.1 times more likely than in those without apathy. Low cognitive function and dementia were associated with emergence of new symptoms. Conclusions This population-based, multi-centre study with a follow-up period of 10 years showed that BPS are associated with mortality and most symptoms are persistent. Apathy was characterised by a high prevalence, a high persistence and a strong association with mortality, and has a negative impact on disability, management of other disease and caregiver burden. Wiley 2016-03-27 Article PeerReviewed van der Linde, Rianne M., Matthews, Fiona E., Dening, Tom and Brayne, Carol (2016) Patterns and persistence of behavioural and psychological symptoms in those with cognitive impairment: the importance of apathy. International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry . ISSN 0885-6230 Behavioural and psychological symptoms; cognitive impairment; apathy; cohort study http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/gps.4464 doi:10.1002/gps.4464 doi:10.1002/gps.4464
spellingShingle Behavioural and psychological symptoms; cognitive impairment; apathy; cohort study
van der Linde, Rianne M.
Matthews, Fiona E.
Dening, Tom
Brayne, Carol
Patterns and persistence of behavioural and psychological symptoms in those with cognitive impairment: the importance of apathy
title Patterns and persistence of behavioural and psychological symptoms in those with cognitive impairment: the importance of apathy
title_full Patterns and persistence of behavioural and psychological symptoms in those with cognitive impairment: the importance of apathy
title_fullStr Patterns and persistence of behavioural and psychological symptoms in those with cognitive impairment: the importance of apathy
title_full_unstemmed Patterns and persistence of behavioural and psychological symptoms in those with cognitive impairment: the importance of apathy
title_short Patterns and persistence of behavioural and psychological symptoms in those with cognitive impairment: the importance of apathy
title_sort patterns and persistence of behavioural and psychological symptoms in those with cognitive impairment: the importance of apathy
topic Behavioural and psychological symptoms; cognitive impairment; apathy; cohort study
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33569/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33569/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/33569/