학술논문

Prevalence and patterns of cognitive impairment in adult hemodialysis patients: the COGNITIVE-HD study.
Document Type
Article
Source
Nephrology Dialysis Transplantation. Jul2018, Vol. 33 Issue 7, p1197-1206. 10p.
Subject
*MILD cognitive impairment
*DISEASE prevalence
*HEMODIALYSIS
*CHRONIC kidney failure
*CROSS-sectional method
Language
ISSN
0931-0509
Abstract
Background. Mounting evidence indicates an increased risk of cognitive impairment in adults with end-stage kidney disease on dialysis, but the extent and pattern of deficits across the spectrumof cognitive domains are uncertain. Methods. We conducted a cross-sectional study of 676 adult hemodialysis patients from 20 centers in Italy, aiming to evaluate the prevalence and patterns of cognitive impairment across five domains of learning and memory, complex attention, executive function, language and perceptual-motor function. We assessed cognitive function using a neuropsychological battery of 10 tests and calculated test and domain z-scores using population norms (age or age/education). We defined cognitive impairment as a z-score ≤-1.5. Results. Participants' median age was 70.9 years (range 21.6-94.1) and 262 (38.8%) were women. Proportions of impairment on each domain were as follows: perceptual-motor function 31.5% (150/476), language 41.2% (273/662), executive function 41.7% (281/674), learning and memory 42.2% (269/638), complex attention 48.8% (329/674). Among 474 participants with data for all domains, only 28.9% (n = 137) were not impaired on any domain, with 25.9% impaired on a single domain (n = 123), 17.3% on two (n = 82), 13.9% on three (n = 66), 9.1% on four (n = 43) and 4.9% (n = 23) on all five. Across patients, patterns of impairment combinations were diverse. Conclusions. In conclusion, cognitive impairment is extremely common in hemodialysis patients, across numerous domains, and patients often experience multiple deficits simultaneously. Clinical care should be tailored to meet the needs of patients with different types of cognitive impairment and future research should focus on identifying risk factors for cognitive decline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]