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UnknownNCT02549872

Dementia Phenotypes in Primary Care, Hospital, and National Mortality Registries

Dementia Phenotypes in Primary Care, Hospital, and National Mortality Registries: a Cohort Study in Linked Electronic Health Records

Status
Unknown
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
51,000 (estimated)
Sponsor
University College, London · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Accepted

Summary

Most patients with dementia in the UK use their local hospitals and general (family) practices throughout their illness. Linked electronic health records from primary care, hospital and death certificates records therefore provide useful information about the diagnosis and prognosis of patients who develop dementia. In this study we will assess the validity of dementia diagnoses in linked primary care, hospital and death records, by examining the timing of important health transitions in patients with recorded dementia, and we will estimate the lifetime risk of recorded dementia in different age and sex groups

Detailed description

Dementia is a clinical syndrome with insidious onset that is difficult to diagnose in its earliest stages. Presentation to healthcare depends not only upon the rates of disease progression, but also on social support, recognition by clinicians, and patients' and carers' fear of diagnosis. Maintaining complete follow up in cohorts of patient with dementia is difficult, because patients with dementia are frequently lost to follow up. Most patients with dementia in the UK use their local hospitals and general (family) practices throughout their illness. Linked electronic health records from primary care, hospital and death certificates records should therefore provide useful information about the diagnosis and prognosis of patients who develop dementia with minimal loss to follow-up rates and improved completeness of diagnosis. Demonstrating that patients with recorded dementia have an earlier onset of typical symptoms, functional impairment and death than patients in the general population would support the veracity of diagnosed dementia recorded in electronic health records and its use as an outcome or exposure in cohort studies and for evaluating policy. Previous studies have found that dementia is poorly recorded in routine clinical practice in comparison to face-to-face studies, although this varies by setting and region. However, ascertainment may be improved by examining linked, longitudinal resources. Comparing the lifetime risk of dementia calculated from linked electronic health records with lifetime risks from other sources will also be a useful information to support the use of linked electronic health records in dementia research. Electronic health records contain information on important health transitions in patients with dementia: from the earliest stage of the illness (depression, anxiety, memory complaints); the development of cognitive impairment that manifest as loss of capacity or missed appointments; and significant functional impairment, with admission to nursing homes or hospital admission. In this study, we will assess the validity of dementia diagnoses in linked primary care, hospital and death records, by examining the timing of important health transitions in patients with recorded dementia, and estimate the lifetime risk of recorded dementia in different age and sex groups.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERThis is not an intervention studyThis study is based on the retrospective analysis of linked electronic health records.

Timeline

Start date
2015-09-01
Primary completion
2015-10-01
Completion
2015-12-01
First posted
2015-09-15
Last updated
2015-09-15

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United Kingdom

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT02549872. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.