Department of Neurology, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Department of Public and Occupational Health, Amsterdam UMC, University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
Cochrane Database Syst Rev. 2021 Nov 8;11(11):CD013572. doi: 10.1002/14651858.CD013572.pub2.
Dementia is a worldwide concern. Its global prevalence is increasing. Currently, no effective medical treatment exists to cure or to delay the onset of cognitive decline or dementia. Up to 40% of dementia is attributable to potentially modifiable risk factors, which has led to the notion that targeting these risk factors might reduce the incidence of cognitive decline and dementia. Since sporadic dementia is a multifactorial condition, thought to derive from multiple causes and risk factors, multi-domain interventions may be more effective for the prevention of dementia than those targeting single risk factors.
To assess the effects of multi-domain interventions for the prevention of cognitive decline and dementia in older adults, including both unselected populations and populations at increased risk of cognitive decline and dementia.
We searched ALOIS, the Cochrane Dementia and Cognitive Improvement Group's register, MEDLINE (Ovid SP), Embase (Ovid SP), PsycINFO (Ovid SP), CINAHL (EBSCOhost), Web of Science Core Collection (ISI Web of Science), LILACS (BIREME), and ClinicalTrials.gov on 28 April 2021. We also reviewed citations of reference lists of included studies, landmark papers, and review papers to identify additional studies and assessed their suitability for inclusion in the review.
We defined a multi-domain intervention as an intervention with more than one component, pharmacological or non-pharmacological, but not consisting only of two or more drugs with the same therapeutic target. We included randomised controlled trials (RCTs) evaluating the effect of such an intervention on cognitive functioning and/or incident dementia. We accepted as control conditions any sham intervention or usual care, but not single-domain interventions intended to reduce dementia risk. We required studies to have a minimum of 400 participants and an intervention and follow-up duration of at least 12 months.
We initially screened search results using a 'crowdsourcing' method in which members of Cochrane's citizen science platform identify RCTs. We screened the identified citations against inclusion criteria by two review authors working independently. At least two review authors also independently extracted data, assessed the risk of bias and applied the GRADE approach to assess the certainty of evidence. We defined high-certainty reviews as trials with a low risk of bias across all domains other than blinding of participants and personnel involved in administering the intervention (because lifestyle interventions are difficult to blind). Critical outcomes were incident dementia, incident mild cognitive impairment (MCI), cognitive decline measured with any validated measure, and mortality. Important outcomes included adverse events (e.g. cardiovascular events), quality of life, and activities of daily living (ADL). Where appropriate, we synthesised data in random-effects meta-analyses. We expressed treatment effects as risk ratios (RRs) and mean differences (MDs) with 95% confidence intervals (CIs).
We included nine RCTs (18.452 participants) in this review. Two studies reported incident dementia as an outcome; all nine studies reported a measure for cognitive functioning. Assessment of cognitive functioning was very heterogeneous across studies, ranging from complete neuropsychological assessments to short screening tests such as the mini-mental state examination (MMSE). The duration of the interventions varied from 12 months to 10 years. We compared multi-domain interventions against usual care or a sham intervention. Positive MDs and RRs <1 favour multi-domain interventions over control interventions. For incident dementia, there was no evidence of a difference between the multi-domain intervention group and the control group (RR 0.94, 95% CI 0.76 to 1.18; 2 studies; 7256 participants; high-certainty evidence). There was a small difference in composite Z-score for cognitive function measured with a neuropsychological test battery (NTB) (MD 0.03, 95% CI 0.01 to 0.06; 3 studies; 4617 participants; high-certainty evidence) and with the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) scale (MD 0.76 point, 95% CI 0.05 to 1.46; 2 studies; 1554 participants), but the certainty of evidence for the MoCA was very low (due to serious risk of bias, inconsistency and indirectness) and there was no evidence of an effect on the MMSE (MD 0.02 point, 95% CI -0.06 to 0.09; 6 studies; 8697participants; moderate-certainty evidence). There was no evidence of an effect on mortality (RR 0.93, 95% CI 0.84 to 1.04; 4 studies; 11,487 participants; high-certainty evidence). There was high-certainty evidence for an interaction of the multi-domain intervention with ApoE4 status on the outcome of cognitive function measured with an NTB (carriers MD 0.14, 95% CI 0.04 to 0.25, noncarriers MD 0.04, 95% CI -0.02 to 0.10, P for interaction 0.09). There was no clear evidence for an interaction with baseline cognitive status (defined by MMSE-score) on cognitive function measured with an NTB (low baseline MMSE group MD 0.06, 95% CI 0.01 to 0.11, high baseline MMSE group MD 0.01, 95% CI -0.01 to 0.04, P for interaction 0.12), nor was there clear evidence for an effect in participants with a Cardiovascular Risk Factors, Aging, and Incidence of Dementia (CAIDE) score > 6 points (MD 0.07, 95%CI -0.00 to 0.15).
AUTHORS' CONCLUSIONS: We found no evidence that multi-domain interventions can prevent incident dementia based on two trials. There was a small improvement in cognitive function assessed by a NTB in the group of participants receiving a multi-domain intervention, although this effect was strongest in trials offering cognitive training within the multi-domain intervention, making it difficult to rule out a potential learning effect. Interventions were diverse in terms of their components and intensity.
痴呆症是一个全球性问题。其全球患病率正在上升。目前,尚无有效的医学方法可以治愈或延缓认知能力下降或痴呆症的发病。多达 40%的痴呆症可归因于潜在可改变的风险因素,这使得人们认为针对这些风险因素可能会降低认知能力下降和痴呆症的发病率。由于散发性痴呆症是一种多因素疾病,被认为源于多种原因和风险因素,因此多领域干预可能比针对单一风险因素的干预更能预防痴呆症。
评估多领域干预对预防老年人群认知能力下降和痴呆症的效果,包括未选择的人群和认知能力下降和痴呆症风险增加的人群。
我们检索了 ALOIS、Cochrane 痴呆症和认知改善组登记处、MEDLINE(Ovid SP)、Embase(Ovid SP)、PsycINFO(Ovid SP)、CINAHL(EBSCOhost)、Web of Science 核心合集(ISI Web of Science)、LILACS(BIREME)和 ClinicalTrials.gov,检索日期为 2021 年 4 月 28 日。我们还查阅了纳入研究的参考文献列表、里程碑论文和综述论文,以确定其他研究并评估其纳入综述的适宜性。
我们将多领域干预定义为具有超过一个组成部分的干预措施,包括药理学或非药理学干预措施,但不包括具有相同治疗靶点的两种或两种以上药物。我们纳入了评估此类干预对认知功能和/或新发痴呆症影响的随机对照试验(RCT)。我们接受任何假干预或常规护理作为对照条件,但不接受旨在降低痴呆症风险的单领域干预。我们要求研究至少有 400 名参与者,干预和随访时间至少 12 个月。
我们最初使用公民科学平台 Cochrane 的“众包”方法筛选搜索结果。我们由两名综述作者独立根据纳入标准筛选出的引文。至少两名综述作者还独立提取数据、评估偏倚风险,并应用 GRADE 方法评估证据的确定性。我们将高确定性综述定义为除参与者和参与干预措施实施的人员的盲法之外,所有其他领域的偏倚风险都较低的试验(因为生活方式干预很难进行盲法)。关键结局是新发痴呆症、新发轻度认知障碍(MCI)、使用任何经过验证的措施测量的认知功能下降,以及死亡率。重要结局包括不良事件(如心血管事件)、生活质量和日常生活活动(ADL)。在适当的情况下,我们使用随机效应荟萃分析综合数据。我们将治疗效果表示为风险比(RR)和均数差值(MD)及其 95%置信区间(CI)。
我们纳入了 9 项 RCT(18452 名参与者)进行这项综述。两项研究报告了新发痴呆症作为结局;所有 9 项研究均报告了认知功能的测量。研究之间的认知功能评估非常多样化,从完整的神经心理学评估到简短的筛查测试,如简易精神状态检查(MMSE)。干预的持续时间从 12 个月到 10 年不等。我们将多领域干预与常规护理或假干预进行了比较。RR<1 和 MD<0 favour 多领域干预优于对照干预。对于新发痴呆症,多领域干预组与对照组之间没有证据表明存在差异(RR 0.94,95%CI 0.76 至 1.18;2 项研究;7256 名参与者;高确定性证据)。使用神经心理学测试组合(NTB)(MD 0.03,95%CI 0.01 至 0.06;3 项研究;4617 名参与者;高确定性证据)和蒙特利尔认知评估(MoCA)量表(MD 0.76 分,95%CI 0.05 至 1.46;2 项研究;1554 名参与者)测量的复合认知功能的平均差异很小,但 MoCA 的证据确定性非常低(由于严重的偏倚风险、不一致性和间接性),并且在 MMSE 上没有证据表明存在效果(MD 0.02 分,95%CI -0.06 至 0.09;6 项研究;8697 名参与者;中等确定性证据)。没有证据表明死亡率有影响(RR 0.93,95%CI 0.84 至 1.04;4 项研究;11487 名参与者;高确定性证据)。有高确定性证据表明多领域干预与 ApoE4 状态对使用 NTB 测量的认知功能的影响存在交互作用(携带者 MD 0.14,95%CI 0.04 至 0.25,非携带者 MD 0.04,95%CI -0.02 至 0.10,P 交互作用 0.09)。没有明确证据表明,在使用 NTB 测量的认知功能方面,与基线认知状态(由 MMSE 评分定义)存在交互作用(低基线 MMSE 组 MD 0.06,95%CI 0.01 至 0.11,高基线 MMSE 组 MD 0.01,95%CI -0.01 至 0.04,P 交互作用 0.12),也没有明确证据表明在心血管风险因素、衰老和痴呆(CAIDE)评分>6 分的参与者中存在影响(MD 0.07,95%CI -0.00 至 0.15)。
我们发现,基于两项试验,多领域干预措施并不能预防新发痴呆症。在接受多领域干预的参与者中,使用 NTB 评估的认知功能有较小的改善,但在多领域干预中提供认知训练的试验中,这种效果最强,这使得很难排除潜在的学习效果。干预措施在组成和强度方面差异很大。