Frontotemporal dementia in late life: Prevalence, risk factors and mortality
Abstract
Aims: The overall aim of this thesis was to increase knowledge about late-life behavior variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD). One aim was to estimate the prevalence of bvFTD among older adults and to determine the agreement between different bvFTD criteria. Further aims were to study the correlation between bvFTD and frontal lobe atrophy (on CT) and to explore non-genetic risk factors and mortality in bvFTD among older adults.
Methods: Population-based samples of 70 to 95-year-olds (N=2404) from Gothenburg, Sweden, underwent neuropsychiatric examinations and key informant interviews performed by neuropsychiatrists or psychiatric research nurses in 1986-2001. A subset (n=1074) underwent CT of the brain. BvFTD was diagnosed according to the International bvFTD Criteria Consortium (FTDC) and according to two other bvFTD criteria sets (FTLD-CC and LMRC). An exploratory nested case-control study examined potential risk factors among bvFTD cases, one control group without dementia and one with non-FTD dementia according to DSM-III-R. Mortality associated with bvFTD was compared to mortality among comparison groups with non-FTD dementia (DSM-III-R) and no dementia.
Results: The prevalence of bvFTD varied between 0.2-0.5% at age 70-79, between 2.5-3.6% at age 80-89, and between 1.7-2.2% at age 90-95. To a large extent, different FTD criteria captured different individuals. Among those with bvFTD, 80% had frontal lobe atrophy on CT, compared to 9% of those without bvFTD. Alcohol abuse, stroke/TIA, head trauma, hypothyroidism, and being divorced were associated with increased odds of bvFTD. A diagnosis of bvFTD was associated with higher risk of death than a diagnosis of non-FTD dementias, especially among the oldest old.
Conclusions: The findings suggest that bvFTD is more prevalent among older adults than previously supposed. The findings on risk factors have implications for future studies into the etiology of bvFTD, and ultimately, for prevention. Finally, it is important that clinicians are aware of this diagnosis among older adults, as it associated with a more aggressive course than other late-life dementias.
Parts of work
I. Gislason TB, Sjögren M, Larsson L, Skoog I. The prevalence of frontal variant frontotemporal dementia and the frontal lobe syndrome in a population based sample of 85 year olds. J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry. 2003 Jul;74(7):867-871. :: PMID::12810769 II. Gislason TB, Ostling S, Börjesson-Hanson A, Sjögren M, Simoni M, Pantoni L, Skoog I. Effect of diagnostic criteria on prevalence of frontotemporal dementia in the elderly. Alzheimers Dement. 2015 Apr;11(4):425-433. :: PMID::24954370 III. Gislason TB, Östling S, Guo X, Börjesson-Hanson A, Kern S, Skoog I. Risk factors for late-life frontotemporal dementia: A nested case-control study. In manuscript. IV. Gislason TB, Ostling S, Guo X, Sigström R, Kern S, Skoog I. A population study on mortality in late-life frontotemporal dementia. In manuscript.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy (Medicine)
University
University of Gothenburg. Sahlgrenska Academy
Institution
Institute of Neuroscience and Physiology. Department of Psychiatry and Neurochemistry
Disputation
Fredagen den 5 juni 2015, kl. 13.00, Hörsal Ivan Östholm, Medicinareberget, Medicinaregatan 13
Date of defence
2015-06-05
thorsteinn.gislason@neuro.gu.se
Date
2015-05-18Author
Gislason, Thorsteinn Björn
Keywords
Frontotemporal dementia
Older adullts
Prevalence
Risk factors
Mortality
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-628-9395-8 (electronic)
978-91-628-9394-1 (printed)
Language
eng