Risk assessment and stratification of mild cognitive impairment among the Chinese elderly: attention to modifiable risk factors

Author:

Wang Qiong,Zhou Shuai,Zhang Jingya,Wang Qing,Hou Fangfang,Han Xiao,Shen Guodong,Zhang YanORCID

Abstract

BackgroundThe early identification of individuals at risk of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) has major public health implications for Alzheimer’s disease prevention.ObjectiveThis study aims to develop and validate a risk assessment tool for MCI with a focus on modifiable factors and a suggested risk stratification strategy.MethodsModifiable risk factors were selected from recent reviews, and risk scores were obtained from the literature or calculated based on the Rothman-Keller model. Simulated data of 10 000 subjects with the exposure rates of the selected factors were generated, and the risk stratifications were determined by the theoretical incidences of MCI. The performance of the tool was verified using cross-sectional and longitudinal datasets from a population-based Chinese elderly cohort.ResultsNine modifiable risk factors (social isolation, less education, hypertension, hyperlipidaemia, diabetes, smoking, drinking, physical inactivity and depression) were selected for the predictive model. The area under the curve (AUC) was 0.71 in the training set and 0.72 in the validation set for the cross-sectional dataset. The AUCs were 0.70 and 0.64 in the training and validation sets, respectively, for the longitudinal dataset. A combined risk score of 0.95 and 1.86 was used as the threshold to categorise MCI risk as ‘low’, ‘moderate’ and ‘high’.ConclusionA risk assessment tool for MCI with appropriate accuracy was developed in this study, and risk stratification thresholds were also suggested. The tool might have significant public health implications for the primary prevention of MCI in elderly individuals in China.

Funder

Hefei Municipal Natural Science Foundation, Grant

National Natural Science Foundation of China, Grant

Key Project of Science and Technology of Anhui Province

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health,Epidemiology

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