The descriptive epidemiology of delirium symptoms in a large population-based cohort study: results from the medical research council cognitive function and ageing study (MRC CFAS)
posted on 2014-11-24, 18:49authored byDaniel H.J. Davis, Linda E. Barnes, Stephan Blossom, Alasdair M. MacLullich, DAVID MEAGHERDAVID MEAGHER, John Copeland, Fiona E. Matthews, Carol Brayne
Background: In the general population, the epidemiological relationships between delirium and adverse outcomes
are not well defined. The aims of this study were to: (1) construct an algorithm for the diagnosis of delirium using
the Geriatric Mental State (GMS) examination; (2) test the criterion validity of this algorithm against mortality and
dementia risk; (3) report the age-specific prevalence of delirium as determined by this algorithm.
Methods: Participant and informant data in a randomly weighted subsample of the Cognitive Function and Ageing
Study were taken from a standardized assessment battery. The algorithmic definition of delirium was based on the
DSM-IV classification. Outcomes were: proportional hazard ratios for death; odds ratios of dementia at 2-year
follow-up.
Results: Data from 2197 persons (representative of 13,004) were used, median age 77 years, 64% women. Study-defined
delirium was associated with a new dementia diagnosis at two years (OR 8.82, 95% CI 2.76 to 28.2) and death (HR 1.28,
95% CI 1.03 to 1.60), even after adjustment for acute illness severity. Similar associations were seen for study-defined
subsyndromal delirium. Age-specific prevalence as determined by the algorithm increased with age from 1.8% in the
65-69 year age group to 10.1% in the ≥85 age group (p < 0.01 for trend). For study-defined subsyndromal delirium,
age-specific period prevalence ranged from 8.2% (65-69 years) to 36.1% (≥85 years).
Conclusions: These results demonstrate the possibility of constructing an algorithmic diagnosis for study-defined
delirium using data from the GMS schedule, with predictive criterion validity for mortality and dementia risk. These
are the first population-based analyses able to account prospectively for both illness severity and an earlier study
diagnosis of dementia.