Impact of Anticholinergic Burden and Clinical-Demographic Characteristics on Incident Dementia in Parkinson Disease.

IF 2.9 4区 医学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY
Thanh Phuong Pham Nguyen, Dylan Thibault, Shelly L Gray, Daniel Weintraub, Allison W Willis
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Purpose: Anticholinergic medication use measured via the Anticholinergic Cognitive Burden (ACB) scale has been associated with an increased dementia incidence in older adults but has not been explored specifically for Parkinson disease dementia (PDD). We used adjusted Cox models to estimate the risk of incident PDD associated with demographic factors, clinical characteristics, and time-varying total ACB in a longitudinal, deeply-phenotyped prospective PD cohort.

Major findings: 56.5% of study participants were taking ACB-scale drugs at enrollment. Increasing age, motor symptom burden and psychosis were associated with PDD risk. Female sex and educational achievement were protective against PDD. ACB categories were not associated with PDD overall, but depression and impulse control disorder were strongly associated with PDD in a subsample with high baseline ACB.

Conclusions: Patient and clinical factors modify PDD risk. PD drug safety and drug-disease interaction studies may require considering multiple mechanisms and including dose-based, prospectively acquired medication exposure measures.

抗胆碱能负荷和临床人口学特征对帕金森病痴呆发生率的影响
目的:通过抗胆碱能认知负担(ACB)量表测量的抗胆碱能药物使用与老年人痴呆发病率增加有关,但尚未专门探讨帕金森病痴呆(PDD)。在纵向、深度表型前瞻性PD队列中,我们使用调整后的Cox模型来估计与人口统计学因素、临床特征和随时间变化的总ACB相关的PDD发生风险。主要发现:56.5%的研究参与者在入组时服用acb量表药物。年龄增长、运动症状负担和精神疾病与PDD风险相关。女性的性别和受教育程度对PDD有保护作用。总体而言,ACB类别与PDD无关,但在基线ACB高的亚样本中,抑郁和冲动控制障碍与PDD密切相关。结论:患者和临床因素可改变PDD的风险。PD药物安全性和药物-疾病相互作用研究可能需要考虑多种机制,包括基于剂量的、预期获得的药物暴露测量。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
6.20
自引率
0.00%
发文量
40
审稿时长
>12 weeks
期刊介绍: Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry and Neurology (JGP) brings together original research, clinical reviews, and timely case reports on neuropsychiatric care of aging patients, including age-related biologic, neurologic, and psychiatric illnesses; psychosocial problems; forensic issues; and family care. The journal offers the latest peer-reviewed information on cognitive, mood, anxiety, addictive, and sleep disorders in older patients, as well as tested diagnostic tools and therapies.
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