Dodge HH, Changyu S, Pandav, R, DeKosky ST, and Ganguli M. Functional transitions and life expectancy associated with Alzheimer's disease. Archives of Neurology, 60: 253-259, 2003.
ABSTRACT:
CONTEXT: The concept of active life expectancy, the number of years a
person can expect to live without disability, is used for the first time, to our
knowledge, to examine the effect of Alzheimer disease (AD) on total life
expectancy with different degrees of disability. OBJECTIVES: To estimate
and compare total life expectancy and average duration lived with different
degrees of disability, between persons with and without AD. DESIGN:
Ten-year prospective epidemiologic study. SETTING: A largely blue-collar
rural community in Southwestern Pennsylvania. PARTICIPANTS: A
population-based cohort of 1201 subjects (at the beginning of follow-up) with a
mean age of 75 years. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: At age 70 and every 2 years
thereafter, among persons with AD and nondemented persons, (1) the total
expectancy of remaining life and (2) the duration lived with different numbers
of impaired instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs), grouped as 0 to 1,
2 to 5, and 6 to 7 impairments. RESULTS: Alzheimer disease greatly
shortened the total life expectancy to a similar extent in men and women, with
the most pronounced reduction among those who were younger. Besides their
shorter survival, men and women with AD spent more absolute years, and also a
greater proportion of their remaining lives, with 6 to 7 IADL impairments than
did their nondemented age peers. Nondemented women spent more years with 2 to 5
IADL impairments than nondemented men, while women with AD spent more years with
6 to 7 IADL impairments than men with AD. CONCLUSION: The concept of
active life expectancy adds a useful new dimension to the study of outcomes in
AD.