The Key Features Inventory:
Early diagnosis of dementia to improve quality of life
Principal Investigator: James E. Galvin MD
Summary:
Dementing illnesses such
as Alzheimer's disease are significant health problems in the aging population.
More than 4.5 million Americans have dementia but few are correctly diagnosed
at the earliest stages of the disease. This is due, in part, to the lack of
easy-to-administer sensitive clinical tools to measure early cognitive decline.
In a pilot study of 250
individuals participating in a study of aging and memory, we identified clinical
variables that were felt to reliably distinguish between individuals with very
mild dementia and those without dementia. These "Key Features" were
then used to develop a brief informant-based diagnostic tool, the Key Features
Inventory (KFI).
In this application, we
propose to test the validity and reliability of the KFI in a consecutive series
of patients presenting to the Memory Diagnostic Center at Washington University
for an evaluation of their memory and thinking abilities. The Memory Diagnostic
Center is a faculty practice of five experienced dementia neurologist and four
geriatric nurse clinicians. We will test whether the KFI can reliably distinguish
between nondemented and demented individuals. We also hope to demonstrate that
this brief tool gives reproducible results when administered to the same individual
at two points in time.
We will determine whether the KFI can be combined with commonly used performance
measures such as the Mini-Mental State Exam to increase the diagnostic accuracy
of the physician as compared to our "gold standard", the Clinical
Dementia Rating Scale. A sensitive tool such as the KFI that can be administered
in less than 2 minutes and can reliably differentiate between nondemented and
demented individuals could improve diagnostic accuracy for general practitioners.
The KFI would also be applicable to clinical trials, epidemiological studies
and community settings.