Trends in survival following dementia diagnosis: a multinational cohort study

Author:

Luo Hao1,Koponen Marjaana2,Roethlein Christoph3,Becker Cornelia3,Bell Simon4,Beyene Kebede5,Chai Yi1,Chan Amy H. Y.5,Chui Celine Sze Ling1,Haenisch Britta3,Hartikainen Sirpa2,Hsu Amy T.6,Ilomaki Jenni4,Kim Ju Hwan7,Knapp Martin8,Kunkel Elizabeth9,Lai Edward Chia-Cheng10,Lau Kui Kai1,Lau Wallis C.Y.11,Lee Hyesung7,Liao Tzu-Chi10,Lum Terry Y.S.1,Man Kenneth11ORCID,Shin Ju-Young7,Tolppanen Anna-Maija2,Wong Gloria H.Y.1,Wong Ian1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. The University of Hong Kong

2. University of Eastern Finland

3. German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE)

4. Monash University

5. The University of Auckland

6. Bruyère Research Institute

7. Sungkyunkwan University

8. London School of Economics and Political Science

9. ICES uOttawa

10. National Cheng Kung University

11. University College London School of Pharmacy

Abstract

Abstract This multinational cohort study examines the trends in relative mortality risk following dementia diagnosis in the UK, Germany, Finland, Canada (Ontario), New Zealand, South Korea, Taiwan, and Hong Kong. A common protocol was applied to population-based data of individuals aged 60+ with an incident dementia diagnosis recorded between 2000 and 2018. Data from 1,272,495 individuals showed that the standardised mortality ratios (SMRs) for dementia ranged from 1.27 (95% CI 1.27-1.28; UK) to 2.90 (2.87-2.93; New Zealand). Both adjusted SMRs and hazard ratios (HRs) estimated from Cox proportional hazard models declined consistently over the study period in the UK, Canada, South Korea, Taiwan and Hong Kong, which accounted for 84% of all participants. This study found a steady trend of decreasing risk of mortality in five out of eight databases, which signals the potential positive effect of dementia plans and associated policies and provides reference for future policy evaluation.

Publisher

Research Square Platform LLC

Reference35 articles.

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4. Dementia time to death: a systematic literature review on survival time and years of life lost in people with dementia;Brodaty H;Int Psychogeriatr,2012

5. Effective interventions for potentially modifiable late-onset dementia risk factors: their costs and cost-effectiveness;Mukadam N;Lancet Healthy Longev,2020

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