Abstract

Identification of individuals at high risk of dementia has usually focused attention on the clinical concept of mild cognitive impairment (MCI), which captures an intermediate state between normal cognitive ageing and dementia. In many countries age specific risk of dementia has declined, but whether this is also the case for subclinical cognitive impairment is unknown. This has important implications for prevention, planning and policy. Here we describe subclinical cognitive impairment and mild dementia prevalence changes, in the UK, over 2 decades. The Cognitive Function and Ageing Studies have examined the full spectrum of cognition, from normal to dementia, in representative populations of people aged ≥ 65 years in the UK over the last 2 decades 7635 participants were interviewed in CFAS I in Cambridgeshire, Newcastle, and Nottingham in 1991, with 1457 being diagnostically assessed. In the same geographical areas, the CFAS II investigators interviewed 7796 individuals in 2011. Using established criteria, the population was categorised into seven groups: no cognitive impairment, Mild cognitive Impairment (defined using consensus criteria), other cognitive impairment no dementia without functional impairment, OCIND with functional impairment, cognitive impairment (MMSE < 24 and no functional impairment), mild dementia (MMSE < 24 with functional impairment, not captured by CFAS dementia criteria), and CFAS dementia criteria. Multinomial logistic regression, adjusted for age and sex, was used to estimate the prevalence of impairment in both studies. Results were standardized to the age-sex specific UK and global population. There is a clear increase in the prevalence of other cognitive Impairment no Dementia (without functional impairment), with the purer MCI remaining stable. In the UK, mild dementia is estimated to fall from 520,704 cases (5.7%, 95% CI 3.8, 8.1) in 1991 to 315,142 (3.0%, 95% CI 2.4, 3.8) in 2011, cognitive impairment, has fallen from 1,225,984 (13.5%, 95% CI 10.1, 17.5) to 654,436 (6.3%, 95% CI 5.4, 7.3) cases. Using additional categories which reflect the continuum of cognitive decline and impairment in populations we see that the mildest dementia declines, but that there is stability in estimates of those who meet MCI criteria. Increases were found in the Other Cognitive Impairment no Dementia group. The decline observed in severe impairment thus seems to have resulted in larger proportions of the population in milder forms, seen alongside physical illnesses.

Highlights

  • Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) represents an intermediate state of cognitive functioning between changes expected as a normal part of ageing and dementia [1]

  • Consensus criteria proposed by the International Working Group on Mild Cognitive Impairment, in 2004, broadened the concept developed by Petersen and colleagues to include impairment in any cognitive domain as well as relax criteria focused on functional impairment [3]

  • Cohort effects are not seen in MCI and other cognitive impairment no dementia (OCIND), the prevalence of which appear to remain stable over the 2 decades

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Summary

Introduction

Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) represents an intermediate state of cognitive functioning between changes expected as a normal part of ageing and dementia [1]. Not all individuals with MCI experience decline; MCI has been shown to be a transient state, with some of the MCI population at risk of progressing to dementia at a later stage while others possibly regain cognitive function [5,6,7,8,9]. Population based studies have repeatedly shown that definitions of cognitive decline which cover a broader range of dysfunction, such as other cognitive impairment no dementia (OCIND) are more prevalent than more restrictive definitions of MCI and have a high progression rate to dementia [6, 12]. In 2013 the new Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fifth Edition (DSM-V) was released and included the diagnosis of mild neurocognitive disorder, a pre-dementia state based on MCI criteria [17]. This study found a 98.6% diagnostic overlap between the DSM-V and consensus MCI criteria

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