dementia research: knowledge into care the trinity centre, cambridge 26 september 2011
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DEMENTIA RESEARCH: KNOWLEDGE INTO CARE
The Trinity Centre, Cambridge26 September 2011
Cambridge City over-75s Cohort Study
- a quarter century of research with “older old” people and their carers
Jane Fleming on behalf of the CC75C study collaboration
Department of Public Health & Primary Care, University of Cambridge, Institute of Public Health, Forvie Site, Robinson Way, Cambridge CB2 2SR
Survey 1 Year 0 (n=2610)
Cohort followed-up (n=2166)
Survey 2 Year3 (n=1177)
CAMDEX 1.1 Year 0 (n=530)
CAMDEX 1. 2 Year 2 (n=217)
CAMDEX 1.3 Year 3 (n=152) CAMDEX 2.1 Year 3 (n=463)
CAMDEX 2.2 Year 5 (n=300)
Survey 3 Year 7 (n=713)
Survey 4 Year 10 (n=446)
Survey 5 Year 13 (n=233)
1985
CC75C Study
CAMDEX 3.1 Year 8 (n=125)
1987
1988
1990
1992
1993
1995
1998
2002
Survey 7 Year 21 (n=44)2006
Year 0
Year 2
Year 3
Year 5
Year 7
Year 8
Year 10
Year 13
Year 17
Year 21
2008
2010
Year 23
Year 25
Survey 6 Year 17 (n=110)
Survey 8 Year 23 (n=11)
Survey 9 Year 25 (n=7)
Origins of the study • Before the study began
in the 1980s even the prevalence of dementia in the UK was unknown
• Baseline cross-sectional survey was screening for an intervention study
• Hughes Hall Project for Later Life
Fleming J, Zhao E, O’Connor DW, Pollitt PA, Brayne, C, the CC75C study.
Cohort profile: The Cambridge City over 75’s Cohort (CC75C).
International Journal of Epidemiology 2007; 36(1):40-46
Cognition in the CC75C population aged ≥75
All CC75C surveys included the Mini-Mental State Examination(Folstein et al 1975)
Devised to detect cognitive impairment, testing 7 domains:- Orientation to time and place - Registration - Recall- Attention and Calculation - Language - Praxis - Complex commands
050
100150200250300350400450
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20 22 24 26 28 30
Fre
qu
en
cy
Dementia shortens survival
Fleming J et al (2006) Population levels of mild cognitive impairment in England and Wales.In: Tuokko, HA and Hultsch, DF (Eds) Mild cognitive impairment: International perspectives. Psychology Press - CC75C study data extracted from: O'Connor D.W. et al (1991).
Mortality
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
Minimal Mild Moderate Severe
%.
1 year
2 years
• A year after initial diagnosis mortality was high • 25% of those with minimal dementia had died• 50% of those with severe dementia had died
Functional and cognitive disability Zhao et al, JAGS 2010 Jan;58(1):1-11.
Transitions & place of death +/- dementia
Support loneliness and well-being
Self-rated health (In submission)
The last year of life aged ≥85
Place of death for the ‘oldest old’
Only a small minority (7%) of very old people aged 85+ changed addressin their last year BUT… over half (52%) did not die at their usual address.
Fleming et al, British Journal of General Practice 2010 Apr;60(573):171-9.
TRANSFERS IN PLACE OF RESIDENCE OR CARE AT THE END OF LIFE Place of residence when last surveyed in the year before death
Usual address at death Place of death
Community n=166 (52%)
Sheltered housing n=53 (17%)
Residential care home n=68 (21%)
Care home with nursing n=20 (6%)
Hospital: NHS long-stay n=13 (4%)
Community n=161 (50%)
Sheltered housing n=47 (15%)
Residential care home n=71 (22%)
Care home with nursing n=30 (9%)
Hospital: NHS long-stay n=11 (3%)
160 46 63 1 3 20 10 2 2 1
4 4 1 2 1
Community n=52 (16%)
Sheltered housing n=9 (3%)
Residential care home n=62 (19%)
Care home with nursing n=29 (9%)
Hospital: NHS long-stay
General Psychiatric n=29 n=3
All long-stay n=32 (10%)
Hospital: acute
NHS Private n=128 n=2
Acute n=130 (41%)
Hospice n=6 (2%)
52 7 2 1 15
4 2
5 30 16 3 1 11
81
26 55 9
No dementia
(n=34/142)
Minimal/
Mild dementia
(n=37/142)
Moderate/
Severe dementia
(n=71/142)
Usual address at death Place of death
CC75C QoL at the end of life study - qualitative
Topic-guided interviews
• Study participants
• Relative/friend/carer most closely involved
Topics• subjective experience of being very old
• attitudes towards medical and social care
• preferences, attitudes and concerns regarding very late life and death
Example theme – thinking about the future
Attitudes & preferences regarding the future
• …regarding living in advanced old age• Outlook on remaining life• Longevity
• …regarding end of life care, dying and death• Outlook on dying and death• End of life care preferences
» who delivers EoL care / familiarity / continuity» place of care / place of death » ‘life-saving treatment’ vs ‘being made comfortable’» communicating preferences
Moving to a new place of care
I should have moved here years ago.98-yr-old woman, moved to sheltered housing (fall) .
I think that in a way I shouldn’t have moved so quickly. No, because you aren’t.. when you’re not well.. You see your doc.. People take slight advantage of you don’t they, really?
98-year-old woman, nursing home (hip fracture, dementia) .
Needless to say I didn’t want to give up my
independence, which to a certain extent you’ve got to[..] Then I realised, for my family’s sake, give them piece of mind, it would be the wisest thing to do.
98-year-old woman, moved into care (short-term memory loss) .
CC75C study of falls over 90 years old
• Severe cognitive impairment was the only factor associated with length of time on the floor after a fall, OR 5.9 (95% CI 1.9-18.5)
Falls reported during follow-up:• n=66 (60%) fell during the year following interview… n=265 falls• 3/4 of those who fell were reported to have fallen more than once• 4/5 of falls happened alone, in 2/3 of these unable to get up
Inability to get up after falling, subsequent time on floor, and summoning help: prospective cohort study in people over 90.
Jane Fleming, Carol Brayne, and the Cambridge City over-75s Cohort (CC75C) Study collaboration.
BMJ 2008;337:a2227.
Neuropathology relative to falls: +/- dementia
• Amongst people without dementia:– Most examined neuropathological features ↑across falling groups (↑ from 0 1 2+ fall reports)
especially - white matter pallor- microscopic atherosclerosis- micro-infarcts
• Amongst people with dementia: – Overall burden of pathology was greater, but only micro-infarcts showed a similar ↑across falling groups (↑ from 0 1 2+ fall reports)
White matter lesions by falling status +/- dementia
0%
20%
40%
60%
80%
100%
0 1 2+
Number of reports of falling
Perc
enta
ge w
ith
white
mat
ter p
allor
Dementia
No dementia
K Richardson, S Hunter et al, Neuropathological correlates of falling in the CC75C population-based sample of the older old Current Alzheimer’s Research (in press 2011)
Neuropathology relative to clinical dementia
• Alzheimer-type and cerebrovascular pathology are both common in the very old.
• A greater burden of these pathologies, Lewy bodies, and hippocampal atrophy, are associated with a higher risk of, but do not define, clinical dementia in old age.
C Brayne et al, Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease 18 (2009) 645–658
Collaboration betwn the 3 European studies with population-based brain donor collections
• MRC - CFAS (65+)
• CC75C (75+)
• Vantaa (85+)
Data harmonisation for collaborative analyses relating to neuropathology
• prevalence in the general population and dementia
• genetics
• ‘brain reserve’ factors, e.g. education, social networks
• behavioural and psychological symptoms of dementia (BPSD)
• healthy ageing
Education, the brain and dementia: neuroprotection or compensation?EClipSE Collaborative MembersBrain 2010: 133; 2210–2216; doi:10.1093/brain/awq185
Ways to collaborate with the CC75C study
We welcome approaches for collaboration etc
Recent/current examples include…PhD students (internal and external): - delirium and subsequent cognitive trajectories - service contact after dementia diagnosis - behavioural and psychological symptoms - back pain in old age – effect of cognition on reporting painMasters/medical student/undergrad placements: - self-reported disability and observed function - predictors of a ‘good death’ in very old age - loneliness, social activity and cognitive functionVisiting researchers: - outcomes predicted by functional performance measures - developing cross-cultural comparative research (China)
AcknowledgementsWe are grateful for current, recent and not so recent funding from the National Institute of Health Research Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Collaboration for Leadership in Applied Health Research and Care, the BUPA Foundation, NHS Executive Eastern Region, the Medical Research Council and many more – see full list of funders on the study website: http://www.cc75c.group.cam.ac.uk/grants
Current investigators: Stephen Barclay Morag Farquhar Eugene PaykelCarol Brayne Jane Fleming Elizabeta Mukaetova-Tom Dening Felicia Huppert Ladinska– see full list of past and present investigators and staff: http://www.cc75c.group.cam.ac.uk/personnel
With tremendous thanks to all the study participants, their relatives, carers, care homes and general practices without whom none of this research would have been possible.
Ways to get involved with CC75C and beyond
We welcome approaches for involvement fromanyone with an interest:
- older people and anyone caring for an older person- anyone working with older people- anyone planning services or preparing policies that will affect older people and their carers
Ways to become involved include: - ideas for sharing research findings as widely as possible- commenting on draft reports from stakeholder perspectives- contributing to planning and subsequent stages of potential new research projects arising from the results, e.g.
▪ exercise programmes for people with dementia and carers▪ planning palliative care for hip fracture patients with dementia