The Denver Post

Here are two early signs of dementia

- By Paula Span

Learning your odds of eventually developing dementia — a pressing concern for many, especially those with a family history of it — requires medical testing and counseling. But what if everyday behavior, like overlookin­g a couple of credit card payments or habitually braking while driving, could foretell your risk?

A spate of experiment­s is underway to explore that possibilit­y, reflecting the growing awareness that the pathologie­s underlying dementia can begin years or even decades before symptoms emerge.

“Early detection is key for interventi­on, at the stage when that would be most effective,” said Sayeh Bayat, the lead author of a driving study funded by the National Institutes of Health and conducted at Washington University in St. Louis.

Such efforts could help identify potential volunteers for clinical trials, researcher­s say, and help protect older people against financial abuse and other dangers.

In recent years, many once-promising dementia drugs, particular­ly for Alzheimer’s disease, have failed in trials. One possible reason, researcher­s say, is that the drugs are administer­ed too late to be helpful. Identifyin­g risks earlier, when the brain has suffered less damage, could create a pool of potential participan­ts with “preclinica­l” Alzheimer’s disease, who could then test preventive measures or treatments.

It could also bring improvemen­ts in daily life. “We could support people’s ability to drive longer, and have safer streets for everyone,” Bayat offered as an example.

For now, the search for older people who are likely to develop Alzheimer’s or other dementias takes place mostly in research settings, where patients learn their risk status through some combinatio­n of genetic testing, spinal taps or PET scans to detect amyloid in the brain, as well as through questions about family history.

“It’s all about finding people soon enough to intervene and prevent or delay the onset of the disease,” said Emily Largent, a medical ethicist and health policy researcher at the Penn Memory Center in Philadelph­ia, which undertakes many such studies.

Other kinds of predictive tests are on the horizon, including over-thecounter blood tests for tau, another Alzheimer’s biomarker, but are several years away, Largent said.

That leaves methods that are invasive, like spinal taps, or expensive, like PET scans. These approaches can’t be used to screen large groups of people. “They’re not available everywhere,” Bayat said. “They’re not very accessible or scalable.”

But a GPS device in someone’s car could monitor driving behavior almost continuous­ly at low cost, providing so-called digital biomarkers. “Studies have shown that driving changes in people with symptomati­c Alzheimer’s,” Bayat said. “But some changes occur even earlier.”

The Washington University study enrolled 64 older adults with preclinica­l Alzheimer’s, as determined by spinal taps (the results were not shared with participan­ts), and 75 who were deemed cognitivel­y normal.

For a year, researcher­s measured both groups’ driving performanc­e — how often they accelerate­d or braked aggressive­ly, exceeded or fell well below the speed limit, made abrupt moves — and their “driving space” (number of trips, average distance, unique destinatio­ns, trips at night). “Only now, because we have these technologi­es, can we do this kind of research,” Bayat said.

The study found that driving behavior and age could predict preclinica­l Alzheimer’s 88% of the time. Those findings could spur recruitmen­t for clinical trials and allow interventi­ons — like an alert when a car drifts — to help keep drivers on the road. In areas with inadequate public transporta­tion (which is most areas), that could enhance seniors’ independen­ce.

Dr. Jason Karlawish, a geriatrici­an and co-director of the Penn Memory Center, called the study “provocativ­e” and well designed. “The results suggest that monitoring a real-world, cognitivel­y intense behavior can detect the earliest, subtle signs of emerging cognitive impairment,” he said in an email.

Similarly, a study analyzing medical records and consumer credit reports for more than 80,000 Medicare beneficiar­ies showed that seniors who eventually received a diagnosis of Alzheimer’s disease were significan­tly more likely to have delinquent credit card payments than those who were demographi­cally similar but never received such diagnoses. They also were more likely to have subprime credit scores.

“We were motivated by anecdotes in which family members discover a relative’s dementia through a catastroph­ic financial event, like a home being seized,” said Lauren Nicholas, the lead author and a health economist at the University of Colorado School of Public Health. “This could be a way to identify patients at risk.”

The problems appeared early, with at least two consecutiv­e payments skipped as much as six years before a diagnosis, and subprime credit 2K years before. Although smaller studies have pointed to an associatio­n between self-reported financial mismanagem­ent and dementia, this is the largest and the first to use actual financial data, Nicholas added.

In Japan, researcher­s have developed a machinelea­rning tool that scrutinize­s phone conversati­ons for signs of preclinica­l Alzheimer’s. Using audio files recorded during interviews last year, they compared healthy patients’ vocal features — pitch, intensity, silent intervals — with those with Alzheimer’s and found that the models could predict cognitive status.

IBM researcher­s have picked up elevated risk in writing tests, finding that word patterns and usage predicted later Alzheimer’s diagnoses. Any of these findings might, one day, be used for early screening.

Such approaches raise concerns about privacy, however. “Are people comfortabl­e with a bank or an auto insurance company having and communicat­ing that informatio­n?” Largent asked. “It becomes medical informatio­n in the hands of people who are not physicians.”

Bioethicis­ts have grappled for years with questions about informing patients of higher-than-normal risk for a feared disease for which there is, still, no effective treatment.

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 ?? Sally Deng, © The New York Times Co. ?? What if everyday behavior, like overlookin­g a couple of credit card payments or habitually braking while driving, could foretell your risk for developing dementia?
Sally Deng, © The New York Times Co. What if everyday behavior, like overlookin­g a couple of credit card payments or habitually braking while driving, could foretell your risk for developing dementia?

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