World
Alzheimer's Report 2011: The benefits of
early diagnosis and intervention
Early diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease has
health, financial and social benefits: Call
for nations to support early diagnosis and
intervention
September 14, 2011--The World Alzheimer's
Report 2011 'The Benefits of Early Diagnosis
and Intervention', released by Alzheimer's
Disease International (ADI), shows that
there are interventions that are effective
in the early stages of Alzheimer's disease,
some of which may be more effective when
started earlier, and that there is a strong
economic argument in favour of earlier
diagnosis and timely intervention.
ADI commissioned a team of researchers led
by Professor Martin Prince from King's
College London Institute of Psychiatry, to
undertake the first-ever, comprehensive,
systematic review of all evidence on early
diagnosis and early intervention for
dementia.
Currently, the majority of people with
dementia receive a diagnosis late in the
course of the disease, if at all, resulting
in a substantial 'treatment gap'. This
greatly limits their access to valuable
information, treatment, care, and support
and compounds problems for all involved -
patients, families, carers, communities and
health professionals.
Lead author Prof Prince said: 'There is no
single way to close the treatment gap
worldwide. What is clear is that every
country needs a national dementia strategy
that promotes early diagnosis and a
continuum of care thereafter. Primary care
services, specialist diagnostic and
treatment centres and community-based
services all have a part to play, but to
differing degrees depending upon resources.'
'Failure to diagnose Alzheimer's in a timely
manner represents a tragic missed
opportunity to improve the quality of life
for millions of people,' said Dr. Daisy
Acosta, Chairman of ADI. 'It only adds to an
already massive global health, social, and
fiscal challenge - one we hope to see in the
spotlight at next week's United Nations
Summit on Non-Communicable Diseases.'
The new ADI report reveals the following:
-
As many as three-quarters of the
estimated 36 million people worldwide
living with dementia have not been
diagnosed and hence cannot benefit from
treatment, information and care. In
high-income countries, only 20-50% of
dementia cases are recognized and
documented in primary care. In low- and
middle-income countries, this proportion
could be as low as 10%.
-
Failure to diagnose often results from
the false belief that dementia is a
normal part of aging, and that nothing
can be done to help. On the contrary,
the new report finds that interventions
can make a difference, even in the early
stages of the illness.
-
Drugs and psychological interventions
for people with early-stage dementia can
improve cognition, independence, and
quality of life. Support and counselling
for caregivers can improve mood, reduce
strain and delay institutionalization of
people with dementia.
-
Governments, concerned about the rising
costs of long-term care linked to
dementia, should spend now to save
later. Based on a review of economic
analyses, the report estimates that
earlier diagnosis could yield net
savings of over US$10,000 per patient in
high-income countries.
'Over the past year, the research team has
reviewed thousands of scientific studies
detailing the impact of early diagnosis and
treatment, and we have found evidence to
suggest real benefits for patients and
caregivers,' said Marc Wortmann, Executive
Director of ADI.
'Earlier diagnosis can also transform the
design and execution of clinical trials to
test new treatments. But first we need to
ensure that people have access to the
effective interventions that are already
proven and available, which means that
health systems need to be prepared, trained
and skilled to provide timely and accurate
diagnoses, communicated sensitively, with
appropriate support.'
To that end, ADI recommends that every
country have a national Alzheimer's/dementia
strategy that promotes early diagnosis and
intervention. More specifically, governments
must:
-
Promote basic competency among
physicians and other health care
professionals in early detection of
dementia in primary care services.
-
Where feasible, create networks of
specialist diagnostic centres to confirm
early-stage dementia diagnosis and
formulate care management plans.
-
In resource-poor settings, apply the
World Health Organization's recently
developed guidelines for diagnosis and
initial management by non-specialist
health workers.
-
Publicize the availability of
evidence-based interventions that are
effective in improving cognitive
function, treating depression, improving
caregiver mood and delaying
institutionalization.
-
Increase investment in
research—especially randomized control
trials to test drugs earlier and over
longer periods of time, and to test the
efficacy of interventions with
particular relevance to early-stage
dementia.