Publications

2003

Kiely DK, Bergmann MA, Murphy KM, Jones RN, Orav J, Marcantonio ER. Delirium among newly admitted postacute facility patients: prevalence, symptoms, and severity. The journals of gerontology. Series A, Biological sciences and medical sciences. 2003;58(5):M441-5.

BACKGROUND: Delirium may persist for weeks or months, and discharging elderly patients quickly from acute care facilities is not uncommon. Therefore, the adverse impact of delirium on loss of independence may occur in the postacute setting rather than in the hospital. The purpose of this study is to describe the prevalence of delirium, delirium symptoms, and severity assessed at admission to postacute facilities.

METHODS: Subjects were recruited from seven Boston-area skilled nursing facilities specializing in postacute care. Assessment instruments included the Mini-Mental Status Exam, Delirium Symptom Interview, Memorial Delirium Assessment Scale, and Confusion Assessment Method (CAM) Diagnostic Algorithm. Delirium status was categorized into four groups: full, two or more symptoms, one symptom, and no delirium. Descriptive statistics were calculated and chi-square analyses and an analysis-of-variance were used to examine delirium characteristics by delirium group.

RESULTS: Among 2158 subjects, approximately 16% had full CAM-defined delirium at admission to the postacute facility. In addition, nearly 13% of the subjects had two or more symptoms of delirium, approximately 40% had one delirium symptom, and 32% had no symptoms of delirium. In a comparison of the group with no symptoms of delirium with that with CAM-defined delirium, there was a significant trend toward (a) older age, (b) lower scores on the Mini-Mental Status Exam, (c) more Delirium Symptom Interview symptoms, and (d) higher Memorial Delirium Assessment Scale Scores.

CONCLUSIONS: Results indicate that 16% of admissions to postacute facilities have CAM-defined delirium, and over two thirds had at least one delirium symptom. It is not known whether or not postacute staff have the training necessary to detect or manage delirium. Managing delirium may require different strategies and techniques in a postacute setting, thereby requiring further research.

Jones RN, Marcantonio ER, Rabinowitz T. Prevalence and correlates of recognized depression in U.S. nursing homes. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. 2003;51(10):1404-9.

OBJECTIVES: To provide descriptive epidemiological information on identified depression in nursing home residents.

DESIGN: Survey of the 1996 Medical Expenditure Panel Survey-Nursing Home Component (MEPS-NHC).

SETTING: Nine hundred fifty-one nursing facilities.

PARTICIPANTS: Three thousand seven hundred ten noncomatose residents.

MEASUREMENTS: Demographic characteristics and health care and functional data were collected using key informant interview and medical-record review. Depression diagnoses were derived from Minimum Data Set (MDS) diagnoses and are nonspecific with regard to formal diagnostic criteria.

RESULTS: The prevalence of identified depression was 20.3 cases per 100 residents (95% confidence interval=18.9-21.7). Younger age, female sex, marital status other than never married, white non-Hispanic ethnicity, better cognitive functioning, heart disease, Parkinson's disease, and length of stay between 1 and 2 years were significantly and independently associated with a greater prevalence of identified depression.

CONCLUSION: The prevalence of identified depression in the MEPS-NHC is lower than that previously estimated using formal diagnostic assessment techniques for threshold and subthreshold depressive states combined. Therefore, MDS-identified depression may underestimate the burden of depression. Underrecognition may be particularly acute in black or African-American residents, the oldest old, and the cognitively impaired. Further research on the relationship of MDS-identified depression and depression identified through structured diagnostic interviews in broadly representative samples of nursing home residents is needed to expand the availability of descriptive epidemiological data, to help clarify the results of research making use of MDS data, and to suggest methods for optimizing clinical and administrative data systems.

2002

Marcantonio E, Ta T, Duthie E, Resnick NM. Delirium severity and psychomotor types: their relationship with outcomes after hip fracture repair. Journal of the American Geriatrics Society. 2002;50(5):850-7.

OBJECTIVES: To validate the Memorial Delirium Assessment Scale (MDAS) as a measure of delirium severity in a cohort of patients aged 65 and older; to examine the association between severity of delirium and patient outcomes; and to examine the association between psychomotor variants of delirium and each of those outcomes.

DESIGN: Prospective assessment of sample.

SETTING: Hospital.

PARTICIPANTS: One hundred twenty-two older patients (mean age +/- standard deviation = 79 +/- 8) who had undergone acute hip fracture surgery.

MEASUREMENTS: We used standardized instruments to assess prefracture activities of daily living (ADLs), ambulatory status, cognition, and living situation. Postoperatively, each patient was interviewed daily. Delirium was diagnosed using the Confusion Assessment Method (CAM), and delirium severity was measured using the MDAS. The MDAS was also used to categorize the psychomotor types of delirium into "purely hypoactive" or "any hyperactivity." Telephone or face-to-face interviews were conducted at 1 and 6 months to assess survival, ADL function, ambulatory status, and living situation.

RESULTS: Of 122 patients, 40% developed CAM-defined delirium. Delirious patients had higher average MDAS scores than nondelirious patients (11.7 vs 2.4, P <.0001). We used the median of the average MDAS score to classify patients into mild or severe delirium. Severe delirium was generally associated with worse outcomes than was mild delirium, and the associations reached statistical significance for nursing home placement or death at 6 months (52% vs 17%, P =.009). Additionally, patients who did not meet full CAM criteria for delirium experienced worse outcomes if they had some symptoms of delirium than if they had no or few symptoms (nursing home placement or death at 6 months: 27% vs 0%, P =.001). Surprisingly, these patients with subsyndromal delirium who did not fulfill CAM criteria for delirium but demonstrated significant delirium symptoms, had outcomes similar to or worse than those with mild CAM-defined delirium. Pure hypoactive delirium accounted for 71% (34/48) of cases and was less severe than was delirium with any hyperactivity (average MDAS score 10.6 vs 14.8, P =.007). In our cohort, patients with pure hypoactive delirium had better outcomes than did those with any hyperactivity (nursing home placement or death at 1 month: 32% vs 79%, P =.003); this difference persisted after adjusting for severity.

CONCLUSION: In this study of delirium in older hip fracture patients, the MDAS, a continuous severity measure, was a useful adjunct to the CAM, a dichotomous diagnostic measure. In patients with CAM-defined delirium, severe delirium was generally associated with worse outcomes than was mild delirium. In patients who did not fulfill CAM criteria, subsyndromal delirium was associated with worse outcomes than having few or no symptoms of delirium. Patients with subsyndromal delirium had outcomes similar to patients with mild delirium, suggesting that a dichotomous approach to diagnosis and management may be inappropriate. Pure hypoactive delirium was more common than delirium with any hyperactive features, tended to be milder, and was associated with better outcomes even after adjusting for severity. Future studies should confirm our preliminary associations and examine whether treatment to reduce the severity of delirium symptoms can improve outcomes after hip fracture repair.