Article

Mortality in people with dementia, delirium, and unspecified cognitive impairment in the general hospital: prospective cohort study of 6,724 patients with 2 years follow-up

Details

Citation

Hapca S, Guthrie B, Cvoro V, Bu F, Rutherford A, Reynish E & Donnan PT (2018) Mortality in people with dementia, delirium, and unspecified cognitive impairment in the general hospital: prospective cohort study of 6,724 patients with 2 years follow-up. Clinical Epidemiology, 10, pp. 1743-1753. https://doi.org/10.2147/clep.s174807

Abstract
Purpose: Cognitive impairment is common in older people admitted to hospital, but the outcomes are generally poorly understood, and previous research has shown inconsistent associations with mortality depending on the type of cognitive impairment examined and duration of follow-up. This study examines mortality in older people with any cognitive impairment during acute hospital admission. Patients and methods: Prospective cohort of 6,724 people aged ≥65 years with a structured cognitive assessment on acute admission were included in this study. Cognitive spectrum disorder (CSD) was defined as delirium alone, known dementia alone, delirium superimposed on known dementia, or unspecified cognitive impairment. Mortality associated with different types of CSD was examined using a non-proportional hazards model with 2-year follow-up. Results: On admission, 35.4% of patients had CSD, of which 52.6% died within 2 years. After adjustment for demographics and comorbidity, delirium alone was associated with increased mortality in the 6 months post-admission (HR =1.45, 95% CI 1.28–1.65) and again after 1 year (HR =1.44, 95% CI 1.17–1.77). Patients with known dementia (alone or with superimposed delirium) had increased mortality only after 3 months from admission (HR =1.85, 95% CI 1.56–2.18 and HR =1.80, 95% CI 1.52–2.14) compared with patients with unspecified cognitive impairment after 6 months (HR =1.55, 95% CI 1.21–1.99). Similar but partially attenuated associations were seen after adjustment for functional ability. Conclusion: Mortality post-admission is high in older people with CSD. Immediate risk is highest in those with delirium, while dementia or unspecified cognitive impairment is associated with medium- to long-term risk. These findings suggest that individuals without dementia who develop delirium are more seriously ill (have required a larger acute insult in order to precipitate delirium) than those with pre-existing brain pathology (dementia). Further research to explain the mortality patterns observed is required in order to translate the findings into clinical care.

Keywords
acute admission; elderly; cognition; function; non-proportional hazards

Journal
Clinical Epidemiology: Volume 10

StatusPublished
FundersNational Institute for Health Research
Publication date23/11/2018
Publication date online30/11/2018
Date accepted by journal14/09/2018
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/28305
PublisherDove Medical Press Ltd.
ISSN1179-1349

People (2)

Dr Simona Hapca

Dr Simona Hapca

Lecturer, Computing Science

Professor Alasdair Rutherford

Professor Alasdair Rutherford

Professor, Sociology, Social Policy & Criminology

Projects (1)

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