Optimising dementia screening in community-dwelling older adults: A rapid review of brief diagnostic tools in Singapore

Timely detection of dementia enables early access to dementia-specific care services and interventions. Various stakeholders brought together to refine Singapore's dementia care strategy identified a lack of a standardised cognitive screening tool and the absence of a comparative review of exis...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of the Academy of Medicine, Singapore Singapore, 2024-12, Vol.53 (12), p.742-753
Hauptverfasser: Lim, Jun Pei, Lau, Sabrina, Lun, Penny, Tang, Jia Ying, Chan, Edwin Shih-Yen, Shi, Luming, Guo, Liang, Ding, Yew Yoong, Tay, Laura, Merchant, Reshma A, Lim, Wee Shiong
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Timely detection of dementia enables early access to dementia-specific care services and interventions. Various stakeholders brought together to refine Singapore's dementia care strategy identified a lack of a standardised cognitive screening tool and the absence of a comparative review of existing tools. We hence conducted a rapid review to evaluate the diagnostic performance of brief cognitive screening tools in identifying possible dementia among community-dwelling older adults in Singapore. Brief cognitive screening tools were defined as interviews or tests administered in ≤5 minutes. Studies performed in Singapore on older adults ≥60 years, which used locally-validated comparators and reported outcomes of clinician-diagnosed dementia were included. Rapid review methodology was used in study screening and selection. Quality Assessment of Diagnostic Accuracy Studies version 2 tool was used for risk-of-bias assessment. A negative likelihood ratio (LR-) of ≤0.2 was defined a priori as having a moderate effect in shifting post-test probability. Fourteen studies were included in qualitative synthesis: 3 studies evaluated self-/informant-based tools only, 4 evaluated performance-based measures only and 7 evaluated combination approaches. Eight-item Informant Interview to Differentiate Aging and Dementia (AD8) was the most studied self-/ informant-based tool. One study found informant AD8 (iAD8) superior to self-rated AD8. Another study found iAD8 superior to Mini-Mental State Examination. Among performance-based measures, Abbreviated Mental Test, Visual Cognitive Assessment Test-Short form version 1 (VCAT-S1), VCAT-S2 and Mini-Cog had LR-
ISSN:0304-4602
2972-4066
2972-4066
0304-4602
DOI:10.47102/annals-acadmedsg.2024163