Litcius/Paper detail

Diagnostic journey and management of patients with mild cognitive impairment and Alzheimer's disease dementia: A multinational, real-world survey

Simona Z Vasileva-Metodiev, D. J. Spargo, Eric Klein, Frances‐Catherine Quevenco, Sarah Cotton, Pascual Sánchez‐Juan, Yoshiki Niimi, Nicole R. Fowler

2025Journal of Alzheimer s Disease11 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background An Alzheimer's disease (AD) diagnosis made in the earliest symptomatic stages substantially benefits patients and their care partners. However, little is known regarding the clinical, healthcare system-level, and patient-specific barriers that hinder timely diagnosis and treatment. Objective To explore real-world practices surrounding the diagnostic journey and management of mild cognitive impairment (MCI)/AD dementia patients. Methods Data were drawn from Adelphi Real World Dementia Disease Specific Programme™, a cross-sectional survey of physicians treating MCI/AD dementia patients in France, Germany, Italy, Spain, the United Kingdom, the United States, and Japan between 2022 and 2024. Results Overall, 779 physicians reported data on 5551 patients. Physicians indicated current disease severity for 5421 patients; 37.2% had MCI (87.3% with suspected prodromal AD and 12.7% undetermined etiology), 17.2% AD with mild dementia, 31.1% AD with moderate dementia, and 14.5% AD with severe dementia. When not immediately diagnosed , the median time from first consultation to initial diagnosis was 8.9 and 12.6 weeks when patients first consulted and were diagnosed by either a primary care practitioner (PCP) or a specialist, respectively, compared with 21.6 weeks when a PCP referred to a specialist for diagnosis. Diagnostic delays were predominantly due to specialist wait times. Few patients had diagnostic AD biomarker tests (cerebrospinal fluid testing 9.5%, amyloid positron emission tomography 3.7%, AD-blood tests 5.3%). Conclusions Timely MCI and AD diagnosis is impeded by referral delays and limited use of biomarker testing. Addressing these critical care gaps requires enhanced physician training, reduced wait times and increased biomarker utilization for early management.

Topics & Concepts

DementiaMedicineDiseaseReferralPediatricsAlzheimer's diseaseCognitive declineBiomarkerPsychiatryFamily medicineInternal medicineChemistryBiochemistryDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchAlzheimer's disease research and treatmentsChronic Disease Management Strategies