Prospective Memory Function Predicts Future Cognitive Decline and Incident Dementia

Author:

Browning Catherine A1ORCID,Thompson Claire L2ORCID,Kochan Nicole A1,Brodaty Henry13ORCID,Sachdev Perminder S14ORCID,Henry Julie D5

Affiliation:

1. Centre for Healthy Brain Ageing (CHeBA), Division of Psychiatry and Mental Health, UNSW Medicine, UNSW Sydney , Sydney, New South Wales , Australia

2. College of Psychology, Central Queensland University , Rockhampton, Queensland , Australia

3. Dementia Centre for Research Collaboration (DCRC), School of Psychiatry, UNSW Sydney , Sydney, New South Wales , Australia

4. Neuropsychiatric Institute (NPI), Prince of Wales Hospital , Randwick, New South Wales , Australia

5. School of Psychology, The University of Queensland , Brisbane, Queensland , Australia

Abstract

Abstract Objectives This study aimed to test whether prospective memory (PM) was an early cognitive marker of future cognitive decline and incident dementia using longitudinal data spanning 8 years from the Sydney Memory and Ageing Study. Methods At baseline, 121 participants aged 72–91 years were tested in PM using a validated PM task, Virtual Week, which included time- and event-based tasks presented with varying regularity. Responses were scored “Correct” if completed accurately and “Missed” if the target was not remembered at any time. Measures of cognition were taken at baseline and 2-year intervals over 8 years. Dementia diagnoses were made by expert consensus panels using Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition criteria. Linear mixed models and Cox proportional hazards regression models were used to analyze the data, controlling for potential confounds. Results Both decreased PM accuracy and missed PM responses were associated with rate of cognitive decline measured by Mini-Mental State Examination over 8 years and global cognitive decline over 4 years. Risk of incident dementia increased with poorer baseline PM ability and missed responses. These effects remained significant after controlling for baseline cognition and were strongest for event-based and regular PM tasks. Discussion PM is a sensitive early marker of future cognitive decline and risk of incident dementia. PM tasks supported by spontaneous retrieval (event-based) and those with lower retrospective memory demands (regular tasks) function as particularly sensitive predictors. In other words, deficits in performing less effortful PM tasks best predicted cognitive decline. These findings may encourage clinicians to incorporate PM tasks in clinical assessments.

Funder

Australian Research Council

National Health and Medical Research Council

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Geriatrics and Gerontology,Gerontology,Clinical Psychology,Social Psychology

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