Extremes of baseline cognitive function determine the severity of delirium: a population study
- PMID: 36856697
- PMCID: PMC10151184
- DOI: 10.1093/brain/awad062
Extremes of baseline cognitive function determine the severity of delirium: a population study
Abstract
Although delirium is a significant clinical and public health problem, little is understood about how specific vulnerabilities underlie the severity of its presentation. Our objective was to quantify the relationship between baseline cognition and subsequent delirium severity. We prospectively investigated a population-representative sample of 1510 individuals aged ≥70 years, of whom 209 (13.6%) were hospitalized across 371 episodes (1999 person-days assessment). Baseline cognitive function was assessed using the modified Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status, supplemented by verbal fluency measures. We estimated the relationship between baseline cognition and delirium severity [Memorial Delirium Assessment Scale (MDAS)] and abnormal arousal (Observational Scale of Level of Arousal), adjusted by age, sex, frailty and illness severity. We conducted further analyses examining presentations to specific hospital settings and common precipitating aetiologies. The median time from baseline cognitive assessment to admission was 289 days (interquartile range 130 to 47 days). In admitted patients, delirium was present on at least 1 day in 45% of admission episodes. The average number of days with delirium (consecutively positive assessments) was 3.9 days. Elective admissions accounted for 88 bed days (4.4%). In emergency (but not elective) admissions, we found a non-linear U-shaped relationship between baseline global cognition and delirium severity using restricted cubic splines. Participants with baseline cognition 2 standard deviations below average (z-score = -2) had a mean MDAS score of 14 points (95% CI 10 to 19). Similarly, those with baseline cognition z-score = + 2 had a mean MDAS score of 7.9 points (95% CI 4.9 to 11). Individuals with average baseline cognition had the lowest MDAS scores. The association between baseline cognition and abnormal arousal followed a comparable pattern. C-reactive protein ≥20 mg/l and serum sodium <125 mM/l were associated with more severe delirium. Baseline cognition is a critical determinant of the severity of delirium and associated changes in arousal. Emergency admissions with lowest and highest baseline cognition who develop delirium should receive enhanced clinical attention.
Keywords: baseline cognitive function; delirium; epidemiology.
© The Author(s) 2023. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain.
Conflict of interest statement
K.R. is President and Co-founder of Ardea Outcomes, which in the last 3 years (as DGI Clinical) has contracts with pharma and device manufacturers (Shire, Hollister, Nutricia, Roche, Otsuka) on individualized outcome measurement. Otherwise, any personal fees are for invited guest lectures and academic symposia, received directly from event organizers, chiefly for presentations on frailty. He is Associate Director of the Canadian Consortium on Neurodegeneration in Aging, which is funded by the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, and with additional funding from the Alzheimer Society of Canada and several other charities. He receives career support from the Dalhousie Medical Research Foundation as the Kathryn Allen Weldon Professor of Alzheimer Research, and research support from the Canadian Institutes of Health Research, The Canadian Frailty Network, the QEII Health Science Centre Foundation, the Nova Scotia Health Research Fund and the Fountain Family Innovation Fund of the QEII Health Science Centre Foundation. N.C. is remunerated for her membership of a data safety and monitoring committee of a trial sponsored by AstraZeneca. The remaining authors declare no competing interests.
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Comment in
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The U-shaped curve predicting cognitive vulnerability to delirium severity.Brain. 2023 May 2;146(5):1743-1744. doi: 10.1093/brain/awad115. Brain. 2023. PMID: 37019999 Free PMC article.
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- Reston JT, Schoelles KM. In-facility delirium prevention programs as a patient safety strategy: A systematic review. Ann Intern Med. 2013;158(5 Pt 2):375–380. - PubMed
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