Detection Rates of Mild Cognitive Impairment in Primary Care for the United States Medicare Population - 21/11/24
Abstract |
Background |
Existing evidence points to substantial gaps in detecting mild cognitive impairment in primary care but is based on limited or self-reported data. The recent emergence of disease-modifying treatments for the Alzheimer’s disease, the most common etiology of mild cognitive impairment, calls for a systematic assessment of detection rates in primary care.
Objectives |
The current study aims to examine detection rates for mild cognitive impairment among primary care clinicians and practices in the United States using Medicare claims and encounter data.
Design |
Observational study.
Setting |
Medicare administrative data.
Participants |
The study sample includes a total of 226,756 primary care clinicians and 54,597 practices that had at least 25 patients aged 65 or older, who were enrolled in Medicare fee-for-service or a Medicare Advantage plan between 2017 and 2019.
Measurements |
The detection rate for mild cognitive impairment is assessed as the ratio between the observed diagnosis rate of a clinician or practice as documented in the data, and the expected rate based on a predictive model.
Results |
The average detection rates for mild cognitive impairment is 0.08 (interquartile range=0.00–0.02) for both clinicians and practices, suggesting that only about 8% of expected cases were diagnosed on average. Only 0.1% of clinicians and practices had diagnosis rates within the expected range.
Conclusions |
Mild cognitive impairment is vastly underdiagnosed, pointing to an urgent need to improve early detection in primary care.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Key words : Alzheimer’s disease, detection, mild cognitive impairment, dementia
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Vol 11 - N° 1
P. 7-12 - janvier 2024 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.