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Prevalence of Memory-Related Diagnoses Among U.S. Older Adults With Early Symptoms of Cognitive Impairment

Yuting Qian, Xi Chen, Diwen Tang, Amy S. Kelley, Jing Li

2021The Journals of Gerontology Series A21 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Early diagnosis of cognitive impairment may confer important advantages. Yet the prevalence of memory-related diagnoses among older adults with early symptoms of cognitive impairment is unknown. METHODS: A retrospective, longitudinal cohort design using 2000-2014 Health and Retirement Survey-Medicare linked data. We leveraged within-individual variation to examine the relationship between incident cognitive impairment and receipt of diagnosis among 1225 individuals aged 66 or older. Receipt of a memory-related diagnosis was determined by International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM) codes. Incident cognitive impairment was defined as the first assessment wherein the participant's modified Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status score was less than 12. RESULTS: The unadjusted prevalence of memory-related diagnosis at cognitive impairment was 12.0%. Incident cognitive impairment was associated with a 7.3% (95% confidence interval [CI], 5.6% to 9.0%; p < .001) higher adjusted probability of any memory-related diagnosis overall, yielding 9.8% adjusted prevalence of diagnosis. The increase in likelihood of diagnosis associated with cognitive decline was significantly higher among non-Hispanic Whites than non-Hispanic Blacks (8.2% vs -0.7%), and among those with at least a college degree than those with a high school diploma or less (17.4% vs 6.8% vs 1.6%). Those who were younger, had below-median wealth, or without a partner had lower probability of diagnosis than their counterparts. CONCLUSIONS: We found overall low prevalence of early diagnosis, or high rate of underdiagnosis, among older adults showing symptoms of cognitive impairment, especially among non-Whites and socioeconomically disadvantaged subgroups. Our findings call for targeted interventions to improve the rate of early diagnosis, especially among vulnerable populations.

Topics & Concepts

CognitionMedical diagnosisMedicineHealth and Retirement StudyMemory impairmentCognitive impairmentCognitive testConfidence intervalDiagnosis codeCohortGerontologyPediatricsPsychiatryDemographyInternal medicinePopulationSociologyPathologyEnvironmental healthDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchTraumatic Brain Injury ResearchIntensive Care Unit Cognitive Disorders