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What should we do if we were wrong and Alzheimer was right?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 October 2013

John C. S. Breitner*
Affiliation:
Canada Research Chair in Prevention of Dementia; Pfizer Chair in Dementia Research; Centre for Studies on Prevention of Alzheimer's Disease, Douglas Mental Health University Institute; and Faculty of Medicine, McGill University, Montreal, QC, Canada Email: john.breitner@mcgill.ca

Extract

For more than 2,000 years cognitive decline and dementia were considered a part of aging, like graying of hair, wrinkling of skin, or (more recently) reduction of pulmonary capacity or glomerular filtration rate. Thus, our recent predecessors considered “senile dementia” a normal consequence of the aging process. Their confidence increased after Martin Roth and colleagues added specificity to the concept by differentiating it within the broader category of “senile psychosis” (which, consequently, became obsolete). A diagnosis of “Alzheimer's pre-senile dementia,” by contrast, was reserved for people with earlier onset of dementia.

Information

Type
Guest Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © International Psychogeriatric Association 2013 
Figure 0

Figure 1. (a) Estimates of disease-free survival in the Cache County population. The figure shows Kaplan-Meier empirical survival estimates (sawtooth lines) and two Weibull models (smooth lines) fitted to the data. One Weibull model, with open circles, assumes that age-specific risk of AD onset is homogeneous, i.e. that there are no subgroups with substantially different characteristic risks-by-age. The other model, shown with open triangles, incorporates a parameter corresponding to a proportion of the population that will not develop dementia at any reasonable age. This second model gives a vastly improved fit to the data (Khachaturian et al., 2004). As a result of the admixture of ostensibly invulnerable individuals (in reality, they may only have a much later onset characteristic), the latter curve approaches an asymptotic value at the proportion of those estimated in the model as being not at risk (approximately 25%). For several reasons cited in the text, that estimate is likely to be substantially inflated. (b) The figure shows the disease-free survival (1 – cumulative incidence), as estimated from the exponential equation fitted by Brookmeyer et al. (2007) to data from several well-regarded cohort studies of AD incidence. This curve appears quite similar to the Weibull models in Figure 1(a), although it makes no attempt to discern heterogeneity. Both Figures 1(a) and (b) suggest that the large majority of individuals may be expected to develop AD dementia if they survive to age 100 years. Note: Figure 1(a) reprinted with permission.