Publication date: March–April 2020
Source: Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics, Volume 87
Author(s): Lufang Zheng, Guichen Li, Dawei Gao, Shuo Wang, Xiangfei Meng, Cong Wang, Haibo Yuan, Li Chen
Abstract
Objective
The aim of this systematic review and meta-analysis was to synthesize the pooled risk effect and to determine whether cognitive frailty is a predictor of dementia among older adults.
Design
Systematic review and meta-analysis.
Setting and participants
PubMed, EMBASE, Web of Science, and the Cochrane Library were systematically searched until June 5, 2019. Only cohort studies and population-based longitudinal studies published in English were eligible. Study selection, data extraction and quality assessment of including studies were independently completed by two researchers. A fixed-effects model was used to synthesize the risk of baseline cognitive frailty on dementia in the older adults compared with older adults without cognitive frailty.
Measurements
The risk of cognitive frailty on incident dementia.
Results
Of the 1566 identified records, 7 studies met the inclusion criteria and were included in the review. And 4 studies reporting hazard ratio (HR) of incident dementia for cognitive frailty were included in the meta-analysis. Synthesized results showed that baseline cognitive frailty in the elderly was significantly associated with an increased risk of developing dementia as compared with those without cognitive frailty (prefrailty + CI model: pooled HR = 3.99, 95 %CI = 2.94–5.43, p < 0.00001, I2 = 31 %; frailty + CI model: pooled HR = 5.58, 95 %CI = 3.17–9.85, p < 0.00001, I2 = 0 %). Heterogeneity across the studies was low.
Conclusion
Cognitive frailty is a significant predictor of dementia. Cognitive frailty status may be a novel modifiable target in identification of early signs before dementia.