Safety of disclosing amyloid status in cognitively normal older adults
- PMID: 28263740
- PMCID: PMC5582024
- DOI: 10.1016/j.jalz.2017.01.022
Safety of disclosing amyloid status in cognitively normal older adults
Abstract
Introduction: Disclosing amyloid status to cognitively normal individuals remains controversial given our lack of understanding the test's clinical significance and unknown psychological risk.
Methods: We assessed the effect of amyloid status disclosure on anxiety and depression before disclosure, at disclosure, and 6 weeks and 6 months postdisclosure and test-related distress after disclosure.
Results: Clinicians disclosed amyloid status to 97 cognitively normal older adults (27 had elevated cerebral amyloid). There was no difference in depressive symptoms across groups over time. There was a significant group by time interaction in anxiety, although post hoc analyses revealed no group differences at any time point, suggesting a minimal nonsustained increase in anxiety symptoms immediately postdisclosure in the elevated group. Slight but measureable increases in test-related distress were present after disclosure and were related to greater baseline levels of anxiety and depression.
Discussion: Disclosing amyloid imaging results to cognitively normal adults in the clinical research setting with pre- and postdisclosure counseling has a low risk of psychological harm.
Keywords: Amyloid PET imaging; Anxiety; Biomedical ethics; Depression; Diagnostic imaging; Preclinical Alzheimer's disease; Safety; Truth disclosure.
Copyright © 2017 the Alzheimer's Association. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
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