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Prevalence of motoric cognitive risk syndrome among older adults: a systematic review and meta-analysis

Zhifei Wen, Sihan Peng, Jialin Wang, Hongyan Wang, Li-ping Yang, Qin Liu, Xiangeng Zhang

2022Aging & Mental Health24 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Motoric cognitive risk syndrome (MCR) is a newly proposed pre-dementia syndrome. Several studies on the prevalence of MCR have been published; however, the data vary across studies with different epidemiological characteristics. Thus, this study aimed to quantitatively analyse the overall prevalence and associated epidemiological characteristics of MCR among older adults aged ≥ 60 years. METHODS: tests. A random effect model calculated pooled prevalence owing to study heterogeneity. Begg's and Egger's tests were used to assess the publication bias. Additionally, subgroup analysis and meta-regression were performed based on different epidemiological characteristics to determine heterogeneity sources. RESULTS: Sixty-two studies comprising 187,558 samples were obtained. The pooled MCR prevalence was 9.0% (95% confidence interval: 8.3-9.8). A higher MCR prevalence was observed in females, older adults with a low educational level, depression and cardiovascular risk factors, South American populations, and studies with small sample sizes and cross-section designs. Furthermore, subjective cognitive complaint using scale score and gait speed using instrument gait showed higher MCR prevalence. CONCLUSION: MCR is common in older adults, and various epidemiological characteristics influence its prevalence. Thus, preventive measures are required for older adults with higher MCR prevalence.

Topics & Concepts

Meta-analysisMedicineCochrane LibraryEpidemiologyPsycINFOCINAHLConfidence intervalPublication biasGerontologyMEDLINEDemographyPsychiatryInternal medicinePsychological interventionSociologyLawPolitical scienceOlder Adults Driving StudiesDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchBalance, Gait, and Falls Prevention
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