Feb 6, 2012 | 4:00 PM ET | Rachael
Rettner, MyHealthNewsDaily Staff Writer
Almost everyone currently diagnosed with a
mild form of Alzheimer's disease would be downgraded to not having the
condition, if new proposed criteria for the diagnosis of cognitive problems
were applied, a new study shows.
Instead, people diagnosed as having "very
mild" and "mild" Alzheimer's disease would be
reclassified as having mild cognitive impairment (MCI), which is currently
recognized as an intermittent stage between the normal loss of mental function
that comes with age and the development of dementia.
The new criteria broaden the definition of
mild cognitive impairment, and this will cause confusion when doctors try to
diagnose MCI and Alzheimer's, said study researcher Dr. John Morris, a
professor of neurology at Washington University School of Medicine in St.
Louis.
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Moreover, the new criteria highlight the
fallacy of thinking about MCI and Alzheimer's as different entities, Morris
said.
"[The] idea that there is an MCI stage,
distinct from very early Alzheimer's disease, is artificial," Morris said.
"It really is the same disease process."
Instead of widening the criteria so more
people are diagnosed with MCI, researchers should do the opposite — try to
figure how to winnow down the group of patients with MCI to find those who will
go on to develop Alzheimer's disease, Morris said. In fact, if a patient's
memory and thinking troubles are due to early Alzheimer's, and not due to
depression or medication use, "We can just call it very early Alzheimer's
disease. There's no need to have this distinction," Morris said.
The report is published online today (Feb. 6)
in the Archives of Neurology.
Alzheimer's
continuum
Previously, mild cognitive impairment was defined as
a decline in cognitive function — which could include memory and language
problems — that do not interfere with everyday activities.
But the new criteria, proposed by the National
Institute on Aging and the Alzheimer's Association, state that people with MCI
have "independence in functional activities."
This could mean that, as long as a person can
do everyday activities by themselves, they would be classified as having MCI,
even if they had mild problems with activities such as shopping, paying bills
and cooking, Morris said. (In fact, having mild problems with such activities
is a criterion for dementia, Morris said.)
To assess what the impact of the new criteria
would be on patients diagnosed with Alzheimer's disease, Morris
analyzed information from 17,535 people who had been classified as having
normal cognition, MCI or Alzheimer's disease. Participants were classified
based on how well they could function performing a variety of activities,
including preparing meals and taking mediation.
The results showed 99.8 percent of patients
currently diagnosed with very mild Alzheimer's disease, and 92.7 percent of
those diagnosed with mild Alzheimer's disease, would be reclassified as having
MCI based on the revised criteria.
Considering about 2.5 million people have very
mild Alzheimer's disease, the findings suggest that, very roughly, about 2.2
million people could be reclassified as having MCI (although this calculation
is speculative), Morris said.
Need for
biomarkers
William Thies, chief medical and scientific
officer at the Alzheimer's Association, said the proposed criteria for MCI are
less than a year old, and experts will likely continue to discuss and tweak
them in the years to come.
"We are really now working on trying to
identify exactly where people will fit in the continuum of Alzheimer's
disease," Thies said.
Thies agreed the disease is a continuous
process, and said you could likely not tell the difference between someone with
the most severe case of MCI and someone with the mildest case of Alzheimer's
disease.
But Thies said he does not think the new
criteria will create much confusion. They are intended to be used by experts in
the field, some of whom have already been thinking of MCI in the manner
described by the new criteria. And others who are very conservative when it
comes to diagnosing people with Alzheimer's disease likely won't change their
ways, he said.
Thies also said the field should move toward
identifying which patients with MCI are actually in the early stages of
Alzheimer's disease. This could be done once there are well defined biomarkers
for the condition, Thies said.
While the field is moving toward this goal, it
will likely be a while before biomarkers are routinely used by doctors to
diagnose patients, he said.
Pass it on:Identification
of biomarkers for Alzheimer's disease will make it easier to diagnosis the
condition in its early stages.
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