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Got It, Hide thisLin JS, O’Connor E, Rossom RC, et al. Screening for cognitive impairment in older adults: A systematic review for the U.S. Preventive Services Task Force. Ann Intern Med. 2013;159:601-12.
In older people, do screening tests detect cognitive impairment or dementia?
In older people with cognitive impairment or dementia, can treatments improve cognitive function?
Mild cognitive impairment includes problems with thinking, memory, language and judgment that are noticeable but don’t much affect daily living. Dementia is cognitive impairment that is serious enough to interfere with daily living.
Doctors may not know if their patients have early cognitive impairment without doing tests. It may seem logical that if detected early, people may be able to get treatments to improve their cognitive function. However, we are not sure which treatments, if any, help to improve cognitive function in people with cognitive impairment or dementia.
The researchers did a systematic review, searching for studies that were published up to December 2012.
They found 46 studies on screening tests for dementia. The studies included mostly women (average age 69 to 95 years).
They found 174 randomized controlled trials on the effects of different treatments on cognitive impairment.
The quality of evidence was rated as fair.
Screening tests
The Mini-Mental State Examination or MMSE was the screening test most studied. It detected about 88% of people with dementia. In people who did not have dementia, the MMSE falsely indicated that 14% had dementia (“false-positives”).
Treatment
Treatments that improved cognitive function
Compared with control, cognitive function:
People sometimes stopped taking cholinesterase inhibitors because of side-effects. This was not a problem with memantine and was not reported with cognitive stimulation.
Compared with control, cognitive function did not differ with:
The Mini-Mental State Examination detected most people with dementia among older people but falsely labelled some as having dementia. Cholinesterase inhibitors (including donepezil, galantamine and rivastigmine), memantine and cognitive stimulation may improve cognitive outcomes in older people with cognitive impairment or dementia, but improvements are generally small.
Treatments | Number of trials and people | Effect on cognitive function | Side-effects |
Cholinesterase inhibitors (donepezil, galantamine and rivastigmine) | 48 trials (18,390 people) | Small improvement, which may not be noticeable, at 6 months, mostly in people with moderate dementia or Alzheimer disease | More people stopped taking the drug because of side-effects, but there was no increase in serious side-effects |
Memantine | 10 trials (3,476 people) | Small improvement, which may not be noticeable, at 6 months, mostly in people with moderate dementia or Alzheimer disease | No difference in number of people who stopped taking the drug because of side-effects |
Cognitive stimulation | 6 trials (513 people) | Medium improvement at 6 to 12 months in people with mild cognitive impairment or mild dementia | Not reported |
*Treatments were usually compared with placebo.