Treatment Needs of Dementia Patients Study in Japan

This survey examined treatment needs of dementia with Lewy bodies patients & their caregivers, and the extent to which the attending physicians understand these treatment needs.

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Research article overview in layman's terms.

This study provides insight into the treatment needs of patients with dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) and their caregivers, and the extent to which the attending physicians understand these treatment needs. Through an observational study using questionnaires for patients, caregivers, and physicians, this study explored the top treatment needs of patients and caregivers and the concordance rate between patient-physician and caregiver-physician pairs.

The results of this study suggest that attending physicians should pay more attention to autonomic dysfunction and sleep-related disorders in the treatment of DLB.

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Treatment needs of dementia with Lewy bodies according to patients, caregivers, and physicians: a cross-sectional, observational, questionnaire-based study in Japan

Abstract

Dementia with Lewy bodies

Understanding the treatment needs of patients with dementia with Lewy bodies (DLB) is essential to develop treatment strategies. We examined the treatment needs of patients with DLB and their caregivers and the extent to which the attending physicians understand these treatment needs.

Methods

This was a cross-sectional, observational study conducted using questionnaires for patients, caregivers, and physicians. The study participants included patients, their caregivers, and their attending physicians who were experts in DLB. Fifty-two symptoms that are frequent and clinically important in DLB were pre-selected and classified into seven symptom domains. Treatment needs of patients and caregivers were defined as ‘symptom that causes them most distress,’ and the frequency of each answer was tabulated. To assess the physicians’ understanding of the treatment needs of patients and caregivers, patient-physician and caregiver-physician concordance rates for each answer regarding treatment needs were calculated according to symptom domains.

Results

In total, 263 pairs of patients’ caregivers and 38 physicians were surveyed. The mean age of patients was 79.3 years, and their mean total score on the Mini-Mental State Examination was 20.9. Thirty-five and 38 symptoms were selected as symptoms causing patients and caregivers most distress, respectively. Memory impairment was most frequently selected for the treatment needs of patients, followed by constipation and bradykinesia. Memory impairment was also most frequently selected by caregivers, followed by visual hallucinations. For the symptom domain that causes patients or caregivers most distress, only about half of the patient-physician pairs (46.9%) and caregiver-physician pairs (50.8%) were matched. Logistic regression analysis identified that concordance rates for treatment needs between patient-physician and caregiver-physician were lower when autonomic dysfunction and sleep-related disorders were selected as the symptom domains that cause most distress.

Conclusion

There was considerable variability in the treatment needs of patients with DLB and their caregivers. Attending physicians had difficulty understanding the top treatment needs of their patients and caregivers, despite their expertise in DLB, because of various clinical manifestations. Attending physicians should pay more attention to autonomic dysfunction and sleep-related disorders in the treatment of DLB.

Authors

Mamoru Hashimoto, Yuta Manabe, Takuhiro Yamaguchi, Shunji Toya, Manabu Ikeda

Published Date

2022-12-15

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1186/s13195-022-01130-4

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Treatment Needs of Dementia Patients Study in Japan
Treatment Needs of Dementia Patients Study in Japan

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