An evaluation of the additional benefit of population screening for dementia beyond a passive case-finding approach

Date

2017

Authors

Mate, K.E.
Magin, P.J.
Brodaty, H.
Stocks, N.P.
Gunn, J.
Disler, P.B.
Marley, J.E.
Pond, C.D.

Editors

Advisors

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Type:

Journal article

Citation

International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 2017; 32(3):316-323

Statement of Responsibility

Karen E. Mate, Parker J. Magin, Henry Brodaty, Nigel P. Stocks, Jane Gunn, Peter B. Disler, John E. Marley, and C. Dimity Pond

Conference Name

Abstract

Objective: General practitioners (GPs) fail to identify more than 50% of dementia cases using the existing passive case-finding approach. Using data from the “Ageing in General Practice” study, we sought to establish the additional benefit of screening all patients over the age of 75 for dementia beyond those patients already identified by passive case-finding. Method: Patients were classified as “case-finding” (n = 425) or “screening” (n = 1006) based on their answers to four subjective memory related questions or their GP’s clinical judgement of their dementia status. Cognitive status of each patient was formally assessed by a research nurse using the Cambridge Cognition Examination (CAMCOG-R). Patients then attended their usual GP for administration of the GP assessment of Cognition (GPCOG) dementia screening instrument, and follow-up care and/or referral as necessary in light of the outcome. Results: The prevalence of dementia was significantly higher in the case-finding group (13.6%) compared to the screening group (4.6%; p < 0.01). The GPCOG had a positive predictive value (PPV) of 61% in the case-finding group and 39% in the screening group; negative predictive value was >95% in both groups. GPs and their patients both found the GPCOG to be an acceptable cognitive assessment tool. The dementia cases missed via case-finding were younger (p = 0.024) and less cognitively impaired (p = 0.020) than those detected. Conclusion: There is a very limited benefit of screening for dementia, as most people with dementia could be detected using a case-finding approach, and considerable potential for social and economic harm because of the low PPV associated with screening.

School/Discipline

Dissertation Note

Provenance

Description

Access Status

Rights

Copyright © 2016 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

License

Call number

Persistent link to this record