Disease severity accounts for minimal variance of quality of life in people with dementia and their carers: analyses of cross-sectional data from the MODEM study
-
Published:2020-07-06
Issue:1
Volume:20
Page:
-
ISSN:1471-2318
-
Container-title:BMC Geriatrics
-
language:en
-
Short-container-title:BMC Geriatr
Author:
Farina NicolasORCID, King Derek, Burgon Clare, Berwald Sharne, Bustard Elizabeth, Feeney Yvonne, Habibi Ruth, Comas-Herrera Adelina, Knapp Martin, Banerjee Sube, Adelaja Bayo, Avendano Mauricio, Bamford Sally-Marie, Banerjee Sube, Berwald Sharne, Bowling Ann, Burgon Clare, Bustard Elizabeth, Habibi Ruth, Comas-Herrera Adelina, Dangoor Margaret, Dixon Josie, Farina Nicolas, Feeney Yvonne, Greengross Sally, Grundy Emily, Hu Bo, Jagger Carol, Jopling Kate, Knapp Martin, King Derek, Kingston Andrew, Lombard Daniel, Lorenz Klara, McDaid David, Park A-La, Pikhartova Jitka, Read Sanna, Rehill Amritpal, Wittenberg Raphael,
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Due to the progressive nature of dementia, it is important to understand links between disease severity and health-related outcomes. The aim of this study is to explore the relationship between disease severity and the quality of life (QoL) of people with dementia and their family carers using a number of disease-specific and generic measures.
Methods
In the MODEM cohort study, three-hundred and seven people with clinically diagnosed dementia and their carers were recruited on a quota basis to provide equal numbers of people with mild (standardised Mini-Mental State Examination (sMMSE), n = 110), moderate (sMMSE 10–19, n = 100), and severe (sMMSE 0–9, n = 97) cognitive impairment. A series of multiple regression models were created to understand the associations between dementia severity and the QoL of people with dementia and the QoL of their carers. QoL was measured using self- (DEMQOL, EQ-5D, CASP-19) and proxy-reports (DEMQOL-Proxy, EQ-5D) of disease-specific and generic QoL of the person with dementia. Carer generic QoL was measured by self-report (EQ-5D, SF-12).
Results
Disease severity, as measured by the sMMSE, was not significantly associated with the QoL of the person with dementia or the carer (p > 0.05), even after controlling for potential confounding variables for self-reported instruments. Proxy measures (rated by the carer) differed systematically in that there were small, but statistically significant proportions of the variance of QoL was explained by severity of cognitive impairment in multiple adjusted models. We also found little in the way of statistically significant relationships between the QoL of people with dementia and that of their carers except between DEMQOL-Proxy scores and the carer EQ-5D scores and carer SF-12 mental sub-scores.
Conclusions
The data generated supports the somewhat counterintuitive argument that severity of cognitive impairment (and therefore severity of dementia) is not associated with lower QoL for the person with dementia when self-report measures are used. However, in absolute terms, as judged by the variance in the multivariate models, it is clear that the contribution of dementia severity to the QoL of people with dementia is minimal whatever the measurement used, be it self- or proxy-rated, or disease-specific or generic.
Funder
Economic & Social Research Council
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Geriatrics and Gerontology
Reference73 articles.
1. Mesterton J, Wimo A, By Å, Langworth S, Winblad B, Jönsson L. Cross sectional observational study on the societal costs of Alzheimer’s disease. Curr Alzheimer Res. 2010;7(4):358–67. 2. Wittenberg R, Knapp M, Hu B, Comas-Herrera A, King D, Rehill A, et al. The costs of dementia in England. Int J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2019;34(7):1095–103. 3. Kazui H, Yoshiyama K, Kanemoto H, Suzuki Y, Sato S, Hashimoto M, et al. Differences of behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia in disease severity in four major dementias. PLoS One. 2016;11(8):e0161092. 4. Landes AM, Sperry SD, Strauss ME. Prevalence of apathy, Dysphoria, and depression in relation to dementia severity in Alzheimer’s disease. J Neuropsychiatry Clin Neurosci. 2005;17(3):342–9. 5. Prince M, Knapp M, Guerchet M, McCrone P, Prina M, Comas-Herrera A, et al. Dementia UK: update. Second. London: Alzheimer’s Society; 2014.
Cited by
14 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献
|
|