Brain Sciences (Nov 2019)

Does Empirically Derived Classification of Individuals with Subjective Cognitive Complaints Predict Dementia?

  • Eduardo Picón,
  • Onésimo Juncos-Rabadán,
  • Cristina Lojo-Seoane,
  • María Campos-Magdaleno,
  • Sabela C. Mallo,
  • Ana Nieto-Vietes,
  • Arturo X. Pereiro,
  • David Facal

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/brainsci9110314
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 9, no. 11
p. 314

Abstract

Read online

(1) Background: Early identification of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) in people reporting subjective cognitive complaints (SCC) and the study of progression of cognitive decline are important issues in dementia research. This paper examines whether empirically derived procedures predict progression from MCI to dementia. (2) Methods: At baseline, 192 participants with SCC were diagnosed according to clinical criteria as cognitively unimpaired (70), single-domain amnestic MCI (65), multiple-domain amnestic MCI (33) and multiple-domain non-amnestic MCI (24). A two-stage hierarchical cluster analysis was performed for empirical classification. Categorical regression analysis was then used to assess the predictive value of the clusters obtained. Participants were re-assessed after 36 months. (3) Results: Participants were grouped into four empirically derived clusters: Cluster 1, similar to multiple-domain amnestic MCI; Cluster 2, characterized by subjective cognitive decline (SCD) but with low scores in language and working memory; Cluster 3, with specific deterioration in episodic memory, similar to single-domain amnestic MCI; and Cluster 4, with SCD but with scores above the mean in all domains. The majority of participants who progressed to dementia were included in Cluster 1. (4) Conclusions: Cluster analysis differentiated between MCI and SCD in a sample of people with SCC and empirical criteria were more closely associated with progression to dementia than standard criteria.

Keywords