Publication:

Delirium Severity Post-Surgery and its Relationship with Long-Term Cognitive Decline in a Cohort of Patients without Dementia

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

2017

Published Version

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

IOS Press
The Harvard community has made this article openly available. Please share how this access benefits you.

Research Projects

Organizational Units

Journal Issue

Citation

Vasunilashorn, Sarinnapha M., Tamara G. Fong, Asha Albuquerque, Edward R. Marcantonio, Eva M. Schmitt, Douglas Tommet, Yun Gou, Thomas G. Travison, Richard N. Jones, and Sharon K. Inouye. 2017. “Delirium Severity Post-Surgery and Its Relationship with Long-Term Cognitive Decline in a Cohort of Patients Without Dementia.” Edited by Miles Berger. Journal of Alzheimer’s Disease 61 (1) (November 28): 347–358. doi:10.3233/jad-170288.

Abstract

Background: Delirium has been associated with more rapid cognitive decline. However, it is unknown whether increased delirium severity is associated with a higher rate of long-term cognitive decline. Objective: To evaluate delirium severity and the presence and rate of cognitive decline over 36 months following surgery. Methods: We examined patients from the Successful Aging after Elective Surgery Study, who were age ≥70 years undergoing major elective surgery (N=560). Delirium severity was determined by the peak Confusion Assessment Method-Severity (CAM-S) score for each patient’s hospitalization and grouped based on the sample distribution: scores of 0-2, 3-7, and 8-19. A neuropsychological composite, General Cognitive Performance (GCP), and proxy-reported Informant Questionnaire for Cognitive Decline (IQCODE) were used to examine cognitive outcomes following surgery at 0, 1, 2 months, and every 6 months for up to 3 years. Results: No significant cognitive decline was observed for patients with peak CAM-S scores 0-2 (-0.17 GCP units/year, 95% confidence interval [CI] -0.35, 0.01). GCP scores decreased significantly in the group with peak CAM-S scores 3-7 (-0.30 GCP units/year, 95% CI-0.51, -0.09), and decreased almost three times faster in the highest delirium severity group (peak CAM-S scores 8-19; -0.82 GCP units/year, 95% CI -1.28, -0.37). A similar association was found for delirium severity and the proportion of patients who developed IQCODE impairment over time.
Conclusion: Patients with the highest delirium severity experienced the greatest rate of cognitive decline, which exceeds the rate previously observed for patients with dementia, on serial neuropsychological testing administered over 3 years, with a dose-response relationship between delirium severity and long-term cognitive decline.

Description

Other Available Sources

Research Data

Keywords

delirium, cognition, dementia, aged

Terms of Use

This article is made available under the terms and conditions applicable to Open Access Policy Articles (OAP), as set forth at Terms of Service

Endorsement

Review

Supplemented By

Related Stories