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Outcomes of Patients With Mild Cognitive Impairment With Lewy Bodies or Alzheimer Disease at 3 and 5 Years After Diagnosis

Calum A. Hamilton, Paul C. Donaghy, Rory Durcan, Joanna Ciafone, Kirsty Olsen, Gemma Roberts, Michael Firbank, Louise Allan, John‐Paul Taylor, John T. O’Brien, Alan Thomas

2024Neurology14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVES: Retrospective studies indicate that dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) may be preceded by a mild cognitive impairment (MCI) prodrome. Research criteria for the prospective identification of MCI with Lewy bodies (MCI-LB) have been developed. We aimed to assess the prognosis of a prospectively identified MCI-LB cohort at 2 key milestones, 3- and 5 years after diagnosis, to examine classification stability over time and rates of adverse outcomes (dementia or death). METHODS: This was a retrospective examination of data from 2 longitudinal observational cohort studies where participants with MCI were prospectively recruited from North East England and differentially classified as MCI due to Alzheimer disease (MCI-AD), possible MCI-LB, or probable MCI-LB. Adverse outcomes (DLB/other dementia or death) and stability of disease-specific classifications were examined in each group. RESULTS: = 0.278). Premature death was a common competing risk, occurring in 9% of MCI-AD and 11% of MCI-LB within 3 years. DISCUSSION: These findings support that prospectively identified probable MCI-LB is a prodromal presentation of DLB and that disease-specific classifications of MCI may reliably identify different prodromal dementias.

Topics & Concepts

Dementia with Lewy bodiesCognitive impairmentMedicineDiseaseAlzheimer's diseaseLewy body diseasePediatricsCognitionDementiaPsychiatryPathologyDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchAlzheimer's disease research and treatmentsCancer-related cognitive impairment studies