Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
DEMENTIA: EVALUATION AND TREATMENT ANNA BORISOVSKAYA, MD (WITH CONTRIBUTIONS BY J. FREDERICK, MD AND S. THIELKE, MD) Epidemiology 2 US population is “graying” By 2030 there may be 70 million elderly in the US (currently around 35 million) Prevalence of dementia in 65+ year olds: 6-8% Prevalence of dementia in 80+ year olds: 30% Most common type of dementia is Alzheimer’s: 5.2 million Americans have Alzheimer’s as of 2013 Terminology 3 Deriving from Latin (demens – mad) “A mental illness that causes someone to be unable to think clearly or to understand what is real and what is not real” – according to Merriam-Webster dictionary In psychiatry, used to be termed dementia, now called major neurocognitive disorder “Early onset” – before the age of 60, often familial, more common for FTD “Late onset” – after the age of 60 DSM-V Criteria for Major Neurocognitive Disorder 4 Evidence of significant cognitive decline from a previous level of performance in one or more cognitive domains*: - Learning and memory -Complex attention - Language -Perceptual-motor - Executive function -Social cognition B. The cognitive deficits interfere with independence in everyday activities. At a minimum, assistance should be required with complex instrumental activities of daily living, such as paying bills or managing medications C. The cognitive deficits don’t occur exclusively in the context of a delirium D. The cognitive deficits aren’t better explained by another mental disorder A. * Evidence of decline is based on: concern of the individual, a knowledgeable informant, or the clinician that there has been a significant decline in cognitive function and a substantial impairment in cognitive performance, preferably documented by standardized neuropsychological testing or in its absence another quantified clinical assessment. Common syndromes encountered in dementia 5 Aphasia – problems with language, comprehension Apraxia – problems with carrying out motor activities (that the person was previously able to do) Agnosia – inability to recognize objects despite intact sensory function (visual or tactile) Impaired executive function: difficulty with planning, initiating, sequencing, monitoring, or stopping complex behaviors All of the above contribute to loss of IADLs Cognitive decline AND associated neuropsychiatric symptoms lead to increasing dependence on others and often eventual institutionalization ADL and IADL 6 Activities of daily living (ADL) Bathing Dressing Grooming Toileting Continence Transferring Instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) Using a phone Travel Shopping Preparing meals Housework Medication management Money management Someone presents with cognitive problems… what do you do? 7 Thorough history (medical, psychiatric, neurological) Speak to the collateral!! Are ADL/IADLs affected? Physical and neurological exam Cognitive testing (screening, then more detailed if needed) Labs and imaging (rule out reversible causes) Consider neuropsychological testing or referral to psychiatry or neurology Determine the etiology/establish the diagnosis Treat! (or refer) Labwork/Imaging 8 Labwork Chem 10 CBC LFTs TSH B12, Folate RPR, HIV Others only if clinical suspicion is high Imaging CT HEAD NONCONTRAST is standard MRI if vascular dementia is suspected SPECT or PET – usually not in the initial workup, but may be helpful to aid in difficult diagnosis, r/o FTD A few words about “reversible” dementias 9 Drug toxicity Metabolic disturbance Normal pressure hydrocephalus Mass lesion (tumor, subdural hematoma) Infection (meningitis, syphilis) Collagen-Vascular disease (SLE, Sacroid) Endocrine disorder (thyroid, parathyroid) Nutritional disease (B12, thiamine, folate) Other (COPD, CHF, Liver disease, apnea…) Only 9% are potentially reversible Only 0.6% actually reverse with treatment Cognitive screening 10 MMSE (beware of false positives and negatives)- useful to have at baseline, can track changes over time. In Alzheimer’s, patients lose 3 points/year. MOCA – free, comprehensive, not easy! Catches those with higher premorbid functioning levels. Mocatest.org Mini-Cog – combines clock drawing and three item memory test. See scoring guidelines next slide. SLUMS – better psychometric properties than MMSE, with scoring normed to educational level http://medschool.slu.edu/agingsuccessfully/pdfsurveys/ slumsexam_05.pdf MINI-COG 11 Your best bet in a busy clinic setting. 1. Instruct the patient to listen carefully to and remember these 3 words: banana-sunrise-chair 2. Instruct the patient to draw the face of a clock, after the numbers are placed, ask them to draw the hands of the clock to read “one ten.” 3. Ask the patient to repeat the 3 previously stated words. SCORING: 1 point for each recalled word. Patients recalling none of the words are cognitively impaired (score 0). Patients recalling all 3 words are not cognitively impaired (Score 3). Patients with word recall or 1-2 words are classified based on the clock drawing test: abnormal clock= cognitively impaired, normal = not cognitively impaired. Clock Drawing Test--abnormal Dementia syndromes 13 Alzheimer’s disease Vascular dementia Lewy body dementia (LBD) Parkinson’s disease dementia (PDD) Fronto-temporal dementia (FTD) Mixed pathology Korsakoff’s Alzheimer’s disease 14 Insidious onset, gradual progression, incidence age-related Short term memory problems on presentation Most common dementing illness Ultimate diagnosis based on pathology of neurofibrillary tangles and senile plaques Biochemically characterized by a deficiency of acetylcholine, with cortex, amygdala, hippocampus all affected Basal nucleus of Meynert depleted of acetylcholine-containing neurons In minority of cases there’s an autosomal dominant inheritance linked to chromosomes 1, 14, or 21 (early onset) Apolipoprotein E gene, coded on chromosome 19, when homozygous for allele E4, increases the risk for late onset Alzheimer’s Course of Alzheimer’s Disease 15 Mild (MMSE 20-24) – primarily memory and visuospatial deficits, mild executive functioning impairment Moderate (MMSE 11-20) – more pronounced aphasia, apraxia, loss of IADLs, may need increased assistance with ADLs, often exhibiting neuropsychiatric symptoms Severe (MMSE 0-10) – severe language disturbances, pronounced neuropsych manifestations, neurological symptoms (rigidity, incontinence, dysphagia, gait disturbance) Death 8-12 years after the diagnosis Institutionalization common with increasing neuropsychiatric sx, loss of ADLs, caregiver stress Vascular dementia 16 10-20% of dementia cases in North America (10-15% cases of AD are actually mixed AD/vascular) NINDS-AIREN criteria used clinically, defined as presence of - Dementia - Cerebrovascular disease (focal signs on neuro exam and evidence of CVD on imaging) - Relationship between the two, as in: a)Onset of dementia within 3 months since a recognized stroke and/or b)Abrupt deterioration in cognitive function or stepwise, fluctuating progression of cognitive deficits Vascular dementia: cortical subtype 17 Symptoms are related to the areas affected/strategically placed infarcts: Medial frontal: executive dysfunction, abulia, or apathy. Bilateral medial frontal lobe infarction may cause akinetic mutism. Left parietal: aphasia, apraxia, or agnosia. Right parietal: hemineglect (anosognosia, asomatognosia), confusion, agitation, visuospatial and constructional difficulty. Medial temporal: anterograde amnesia. Vascular dementia: subcortical subtype 18 Lacunar infarcts and chronic ischemia affect white matter pathways and deep cerebral nuclei: Focal motor signs Early presence of gait disturbance History of unsteadiness and frequent, unprovoked falls Early urinary frequency, urgency, and other urinary symptoms not explained by urologic disease Pseudobulbar palsy Personality and mood changes, abulia, apathy, depression, emotional incontinence Cognitive disorder characterized by relatively mild memory deficit, psychomotor retardation, and abnormal executive function Dementia with Lewy Bodies 19 4-33% of dementia cases are LBD (when autopsy is performed, greater frequency is found) Cortical Lewy bodies are the hallmark Tough to diagnose, especially in mixed cases Diagnosis paramount due to particular treatment considerations! Diagnosis of LBD 20 Dementia Presence of fluctuation in cognition/alertness, Parkinsonism, and visual hallucinations Suggestive features are REM sleep disorder, severe sensitivity to neuroleptics, and low dopamine transporter uptake in basal ganglia on SPECT or PET Falls, syncope, autonomic dysfunction, depression, delusions are common but not diagnostic in and of themselves Parkinson’s disease dementia (PDD) 22 31-41% of patients with Parkinson’s have dementia Cholinergic dysfunction theorized to be involved in genesis Characterized by executive dysfunction, visuospatial impairments, verbal memory problems, visual hallucinations Frontotemporal dementia 23 Also known as Pick’s disease though that is just a subtype (or behavioral variant) Another type is progressive aphasia Usually of earlier onset (40-60 years of age) Memory impairment not that common at the onset of the disease Brain imaging characterized either by frank FT atrophy or by decreased metabolism in FT lobes on functional imaging 24 “Walnut brain” Notice the profound loss of matter in the frontal lobes, to a slightly lesser degree in the temporal lobes, in comparison with relatively preserved parietal and occipital lobes “Walnut brain” Behavioral variant FTD (BvFTD) 25 Core diagnostic features Supportive diagnostic features A. Insidious onset and A. B. C. D. E. gradual progression Early decline in social interpersonal conduct Early impairment in regulation of personal conduct Early emotional blunting Early loss of insight B. C. D. Behavioral disorder – decline in hygiene, mental rigidity, distractibility, hyperorality, perseverative behavior, utilization behavior Change in speech and language – altered speech output, stereotypy of speech, echolalia, perseveration, mutism Physical signs – primitive reflexes, incontinence, akinesia, rigidity, tremor, low/labile BP Investigations – impairment of frontal lobe neuropsych tests, normal EEG, predominant frontal and/or anterior temporal abnormality on brain imaging Treatment 26 Address cognitive dysfunction 2. Address neuropsychiatric symptoms 3. Address the needs of the caregiver and the dyad of patient/caregiver 4. Consider the environment/living situation 1. Treatment: Cognitive dysfunction 27 Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (see next slide) – use in all stages of AD, earlier is better (but not in MCI) Memantine – for moderate to severe stages of the disease Do not use AchE inhibitors in FTD, do try them in other types of dementia Consider cognitive interventions (stimulation, rehabilitation, training) Physical exercise Mediterranean diet has the best evidence 28 Treatment: Cognitive Enhancers Caution: side effects ahead. AchE inhibitors cause bradycardia, diarrhea, nausea. Gradual dose adjustments recommended. Memantine is relatively free of these side effects. Adjust doses in renal/hepatic impairment. Medication Donepezil Dosing Guidelines Initial dose 5 mg at bedtime Titrate to 10 mg once daily at 4-6 weeks For moderate to severe dementia, may titrate to 23 mg at 3 months Notes The only AchE inhibitor FDA approved for treatment of moderate to severe dementia Galantamine Initial dose 4 mg twice a day Titrate to 8 mg twice a day at 4 weeks Titrate to 12 mg twice a day at 4 weeks Extended release capsules to provide once a day dosing are also available. Dosing adjustment recommended in renal and hepatic impairment. Rivastigmine Initial dose 1.5 mg twice daily for 2 weeks Increase in increments of 1.5 mg twice daily every 2 weeks if well tolerated Maximum dose 12 mg a day Dosing adjustment recommended in renal and hepatic impairment. Use caution when treating low body weight patients. The only AchE inhibitor FDA approved for treatment of cognitive impairment in Parkinson’s disease Rivastigmine patch Initial dose 4.6 mg/24 hrs topical once daily for 4 weeks Titrate to 9.5 mg/24 hrs topical once daily For severe dementia, may titrate to 13.3 mg/24 hrs topical once daily after 4 weeks at prior dose Dosing adjustment recommended in hepatic but not in renal impairment. Use caution when treating low body weight patients. Dose adjustment may be needed in high body weight patients. Memantine Initial dose 5 mg daily, at one week increase to 5 mg twice a day, in another week increase to 5 mg in the morning and 10 mg in the evening, and in another week increase to target dose of 10 mg twice a day FDA approved for use in moderate to severe AD Dose adjustment recommended in severe renal and hepatic impairment. Neuropsychiatric symptoms 29 Agitation Aggression Depression Anxiety Psychosis These symptoms are distressing and disruptive for the patients and their caregivers. Agitation and aggression are the reasons why patients end up hospitalized/institutionalized. Caregiver support and psychoeducation may prevent such outcomes. There’s evidence to support this finding, and physician reimbursements reflect their attention to this great need! Treatment of neuropsychiatric symptoms 30 Nonpharmacological approaches should be tried first! And even before that, psychiatric/medical causes of agitation must be ruled out Identify precipitating/contributing factors to agitation/anxiety Teach caregivers how to do the same and provide them with support Address the unmet needs of the patient Allow the patient to remain as independent as possible when helping them with ADLs Use medications when nonpharmacological methods failed, or succeeded only partially, or when high risk/violence exist Options for treatment of agitation 31 Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors and memantine – not great when effect needed urgently Atypical antipsychotics (not FDA approved, increase risk of mortality – black box warning, modest efficacy) Antidepressants – citalopram (consider QTc prolongation) Carbamazepine – evidence not great (consider numerous side effects and drug interactions) Propranolol, prazosin – very limited evidence base, though promising for prazosin (consider falls) Benzodiazepines – emergent use only Treatment of other neuropsychiatric sx 32 Antidepressants for depression in dementia are somewhat controversial. There is little evidence for their use in anxiety in dementia. For severe depression/suicidality, consider hospitalization, consider ECT Recommend psychotherapy, exercise, pleasurable activities, support groups, memory aids Minimize changes in caregivers/environment Music therapy is gaining strength as evidence based intervention for treatment of anxiety Treatment of hallucinations/delusions is not always needed – but when it is, start antipsychotics (atypical) slowly and titrate gradually Use quetiapine preferentially in LBD and PDD Conclusions 33 It is paramount to diagnose dementia! Earlier treatment preserves functioning Correct diagnosis prevents poor outcomes – as in giving haloperidol to patients with DLB Always obtain collateral from caregivers, and provide them with education and support Neuropsych sx are common and are best addressed with nonpharmacological strategies Use cognitive enhancing medications whenever possible Use medications for agitation/neuropsych sx when unavoidable