Prediction of poor clinical outcome in vascular cognitive impairment: TRACE-VCI study

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Abstract

Introduction: Prognostication in memory clinic patients with vascular brain injury (eg possible vascular cognitive impairment [VCI]) is often uncertain. We created a risk score to predict poor clinical outcome. Methods: Using data from two longitudinal cohorts of memory clinic patients with vascular brain injury without advanced dementia, we created (n = 707) and validated (n = 235) the risk score. Poor clinical outcome was defined as substantial cognitive decline (change of Clinical Dementia Rating ≥1 or institutionalization) or major vascular events or death. Twenty-four candidate predictors were evaluated using Cox proportional hazard models. Results: Age, clinical syndrome diagnosis, Disability Assessment for Dementia, Neuropsychiatric Inventory, and medial temporal lobe atrophy most strongly predicted poor outcome and constituted the risk score (C-statistic 0.71; validation cohort 0.78). Of note, none of the vascular predictors were retained in this model. The 2-year risk of poor outcome was 6.5% for the lowest (0-5) and 55.4% for the highest sum scores (10-13). Discussion: This is the first, validated, prediction score for 2-year clinical outcome of patients with possible VCI.

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Boomsma, J. M. F., Exalto, L. G., Barkhof, F., Chen, C. L. H., Hilal, S., Leeuwis, A. E., … Tan, B. Y. (2020). Prediction of poor clinical outcome in vascular cognitive impairment: TRACE-VCI study. Alzheimer’s and Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment and Disease Monitoring, 12(1). https://doi.org/10.1002/dad2.12077

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