The prognosis of dementia with Lewy bodies (original) (raw)
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Three years survival in patients with a clinical diagnosis of dementia with Lewy bodies
International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 2000
The majority of information available on the prognosis of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) is based on retrospective data from autopsy series, which are subject to selection bias due to the speci®c reasons patients are referred for postmortem studies. The earlier studies comparing DLB patients with patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD) suggest that the mean duration of illness is shorter in DLB patients than in patients with AD. However, more recent studies have not observed signi®cant dierences between DLB and AD in age of onset, age at death or duration of illness. We report a 3 year follow-up of a cohort of 114 consecutive patients with dementia, referred to an old age psychiatric service and diagnosed using ICD 10 criteria and the McKeith and Byrne DLB criteria. The case notes of all patients were reviewed to determine the date of onset of symptoms and the date of ®rst presentation to the psychiatric services. Information about outcome was gathered from case notes, hospital ®les and general practitioner (GP) records. Of the original sample of 114 patients, 106 could be traced. Sixty-four had died and 42 were still alive at the time of the follow-up. Thirty-two patients had originally been assigned the diagnosis of DLB, 43 the diagnosis of AD, 31 vascular dementia and other diagnoses. There were no dierences between the AD and DLB group in age at onset, age at death or survival. We have not found any evidence that the prognosis of clinically diagnosed DLB patients is worse than that of patients with a clinical diagnosis of AD.
A prospective study of dementia with Lewy bodies
Age and Ageing, 1998
little is known about the longitudinal course of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) and how this differs from Alzheimer's disease (AD). Method: standardized baseline and annual assessments of cognitive and non-cognitive symptoms are reported in a cohort of 72 patients with DLB or AD. AD was diagnosed using the NLNCDS ADRDA criteria and DLB was diagnosed with the criteria of McKeith et al. Cognitive assessment was undertaken using the MMSE schedule and operationalized definitions were used to diagnose non-cognitive symptoms. Results: 42 patients with DLB and 30 patients with AD were assessed. Of the 19 on whom post mortem examinations have been performed, 18 (95%) have had the clinical diagnosis confirmed. DLB patients were significantly more likely to experience visual hallucinations, disturbances of consciousness and parkinsonism at both baseline and at annual assessments. Of DLB patients exposed to neuroleptics, 33% developed sensitivity reactions. The magnitude and pattern of cognitive decline was similar in both groups. Conclusion: the importance of the core features highlighted in the newly proposed consensus DLB criteria is supported. These features appear to be stable over time.
Diagnosis and management of dementia with Lewy bodies: third report of the DLB …
Neurology, 2005
Author affiliations From the Institute for Ageing and Health (Drs. McKeith, O'Brien, EK Perry, Burn, Kalaria, Kenny, Mukaetova-Ladinska, and RH Perry), University of Newcastle upon Tyne, UK; Department of Neuropathology (Dr. Dickson), Mayo Clinic Jacksonville, FL; ...
Hospitalization in people with dementia with Lewy bodies: Frequency, duration, and cost implications
Alzheimer's & dementia (Amsterdam, Netherlands), 2018
Increased hospitalization is a major component of dementia impact on individuals and cost, but has rarely been studied in dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB). Our aim was to describe the risk and duration of hospital admissions in patients with DLB, and compare these to those in Alzheimer's disease (AD) and the general population. A large database of mental health and dementia care in South London was used to assemble a cohort of patients diagnosed with DLB. These were 1:4 matched with patients diagnosed with AD on age, gender, and cognitive status. Rates of hospital admissions in the year after dementia diagnosis were significantly higher in 194 patients with DLB than in 776 patients with AD (crude incidence rate ratio 1.50; 95% confidence interval: 1.28-1.75) or the catchment population (indirectly standardized hospitalization rate 1.22; 95% confidence interval: 1.06-1.39). Patients with DLB had on average almost four additional hospital days per person-year than patients with AD....
Journal of Alzheimer's disease : JAD, 2017
The aim of this study was to describe the rate and clinical predictors of cognitive decline in dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), and compare the findings with Alzheimer's disease (AD) and Parkinson's disease dementia (PDD) patients. Longitudinal scores for the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) in 1,290 patients (835 DLB, 198 PDD, and 257 AD) were available from 18 centers with up to three years longitudinal data. Linear mixed effects analyses with appropriate covariates were used to model MMSE decline over time. Several subgroup analyses were performed, defined by anti-dementia medication use, baseline MMSE score, and DLB core features. The mean annual decline in MMSE score was 2.1 points in DLB, compared to 1.6 in AD (p = 0.07 compared to DLB) and 1.8 in PDD (p = 0.19). Rates of decline were significantly higher in DLB compared to AD and PDD when baseline MMSE score was included as a covariate, and when only those DLB patients with an abnormal dopamine transporter SPECT s...
Alzheimer's research & therapy, 2017
Longitudinal studies of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) are rare. Clinically, DLB is usually considered to worsen into Alzheimer's disease (AD). The aim of our study was to compare the rate of the cognitive decline in DLB, AD, and the association of the two diseases (AD + DLB). Using the Regional Network for Diagnostic Aid and Management of Patients with Cognitive Impairment database, which includes all the patients seen at all memory clinics (medical consultation and day hospitals) in four French regions, and beta regression, we compared the longitudinal the Mini-Mental State Examination scores of 1159 patients with AD (n = 1000), DLB (n = 131) and AD + DLB (association of the two) (n = 28) during follow-up of at least 4 years. The mean follow-up of the patients was 5.88 years. Using beta regression without propensity scores, the comparison of the decline of patients with AD and patients with DLB did not show a significant difference, but the decline of patients with AD + DLB w...
BMJ Open, 2012
Objectives: Dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) accounts for 10%e15% of dementia cases at autopsy and has distinct clinical features associated with earlier institutionalisation and a higher level of carer distress than are seen in Alzheimer's disease (AD). At present, there is on-going debate as to whether DLB is associated with a more rapid cognitive decline than AD. An understanding of the rate of decline of cognitive and non-cognitive symptoms in DLB may help patients and carers to plan for the future.
Diagnosis and management of dementia with Lewy bodies: Third report of the DLB Consortium
Neurology, 2006
The dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) Consortium has revised criteria for the clinical and pathologic diagnosis of DLB incorporating new information about the core clinical features and suggesting improved methods to assess them. REM sleep behavior disorder, severe neuroleptic sensitivity, and reduced striatal dopamine transporter activity on functional neuroimaging are given greater diagnostic weighting as features suggestive of a DLB diagnosis. The 1-year rule distinguishing between DLB and Parkinson disease with dementia may be difficult to apply in clinical settings and in such cases the term most appropriate to each individual patient should be used. Generic terms such as Lewy body (LB) disease are often helpful. The authors propose a new scheme for the pathologic assessment of LBs and Lewy neurites (LN) using alpha-synuclein immunohistochemistry and semiquantitative grading of lesion density, with the pattern of regional involvement being more important than total LB count. The new criteria take into account both Lewy-related and Alzheimer disease (AD)-type pathology to allocate a probability that these are associated with the clinical DLB syndrome. Finally, the authors suggest patient management guidelines including the need for accurate diagnosis, a target symptom approach, and use of appropriate outcome measures. There is limited evidence about specific interventions but available data suggest only a partial response of motor symptoms to levodopa: severe sensitivity to typical and atypical antipsychotics in ϳ50%, and improvements in attention, visual hallucinations, and sleep disorders with cholinesterase inhibitors. NEUROLOGY 2005;65:1863-1872 Clinical diagnostic criteria for DLB. Since the publication of Consensus criteria for clinical and pathologic diagnosis of dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB), 1,2 new information indicates that clinical criteria for probable DLB have acceptable specificity, but suboptimal sensitivity. Reasons identified in-clude difficulties in recognition of the core feature fluctuation 5,6 and a low rate of all core features (fluctuation, visual hallucinations, parkinsonism) in the presence of neocortical, neurofibrillary tangle (NFT) pathology. 7-9 The criteria have therefore been modified (table 1) to incorporate additional items indicative of LB pathology. Distinction is made between clinical features or investigations that are suggestive of DLB, i.e., have been demonstrated to be significantly more frequent than in