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Published online before print May 13, 2009, doi:10.1212/WNL.0b013e3181a81636)
Accepted February 2, 2009 Predicting risk of dementia in older adults. The late-life dementia risk indexD. E. Barnes PhD, MPH*,
From the Departments of Psychiatry (D.E.B., K.Y.), Medicine (K.E.C.), Neurology (K.Y.), and Epidemiology & Biostatistics (K.Y.), University of California, San Francisco, and San Francisco Veterans Affairs Medical Center; Kaiser Division of Research (D.E.B., K.E.C., R.A.W., K.Y.), Oakland, CA; and Departments of Epidemiology (L.H.K.) and Neurology and Psychiatry (O.L.L.), University of Pittsburgh, PA. * To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: Deborah.Barnes{at}ucsf.edu.
Objective: To develop a late-life dementia risk index that can accurately stratify older adults into those with a low, moderate, or high risk of developing dementia within 6 years. Methods: Subjects were 3,375 participants in the Cardiovascular Health Cognition Study without evidence of dementia at baseline. We used logistic regression to identify those factors most predictive of developing incident dementia within 6 years and developed a point system based on the logistic regression coefficients. Results: Subjects had a mean age of 76 years at baseline; 59% were women and 15% were African American. Fourteen percent (n = 480) developed dementia within 6 years. The final late-life dementia risk index included older age (1–2 points), poor cognitive test performance (2–4 points), body mass index <18.5 (2 points), Conclusions: The late-life dementia risk index accurately stratified older adults into those with low, moderate, and high risk of developing dementia. This tool could be used in clinical or research settings to target prevention and intervention strategies toward high-risk individuals.
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