Article (Périodiques scientifiques)
Time course of dementia following sepsis in German health claims data.
Fritze, Thomas; Doblhammer, Gabriele; Widmann, Catherine N et al.
2021In Neurology: Neuroimmunology and Neuroinflammation, 8 (1)
Peer reviewed vérifié par ORBi
 

Documents


Texte intégral
Time course of dementia following sepsis in German health claims data.pdf
Postprint Auteur (286.25 kB)
Télécharger

Tous les documents dans ORBilu sont protégés par une licence d'utilisation.

Envoyer vers



Détails



Mots-clés :
Dementia/epidemiology; Dementia/etiology; Germany/epidemiology; Humans; Incidence; Sepsis/complications; Time Factors; Dementia; Germany; Sepsis; Neurology; Neurology (clinical)
Résumé :
[en] [en] OBJECTIVE: We evaluated the short-, medium-, and long-term effects of sepsis on dementia incidence using German health claims data. METHODS: A total of 161,567 patients (65 years or older) were followed from 2004 to 2015 at quarterly intervals. Time since sepsis was categorized into 0 (the effective quarter of sepsis diagnosis), 1-8, and ≥9 quarters since the latest diagnosis of sepsis, taking into account admission to intensive care unit and controlling for delirium, surgery, age, sex, and comorbidities. Incident dementia was defined for all persons who did not have a validated dementia diagnosis in 2004 and 2005 and who received a first-time, valid diagnosis between 2006 and 2015. RESULTS: During the quarter of sepsis diagnosis, patients not admitted to intensive care had a 3.14-fold (95% CI 2.83-3.49) increased risk, and those with intensive care stay had a 2.22-fold (95% CI: 1.83-2.70) increased risk of receiving an incident dementia diagnosis compared with patients without sepsis. The impact of sepsis on incident dementia remained in the following 2 years, remitting only thereafter. CONCLUSIONS: For sepsis survivors, medium-term dementia risk remains elevated, whereas long-term risk may reach the level of those without sepsis, even after controlling for delirium. These findings encourage identifying modifiable components of hospital and rehabilitation care.
Disciplines :
Neurologie
Auteur, co-auteur :
Fritze, Thomas;  From the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (T.F., G.D., C.N.W., M.T.H.), Bonn, Institute for Sociology and Demography (G.D.), University of Rostock, and Department of Neurodegenerative Disease and Geriatric Psychiatry (C.N.W., M.T.H.), University of Bonn, Germany
Doblhammer, Gabriele ;  From the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (T.F., G.D., C.N.W., M.T.H.), Bonn, Institute for Sociology and Demography (G.D.), University of Rostock, and Department of Neurodegenerative Disease and Geriatric Psychiatry (C.N.W., M.T.H.), University of Bonn, Germany
Widmann, Catherine N;  From the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (T.F., G.D., C.N.W., M.T.H.), Bonn, Institute for Sociology and Demography (G.D.), University of Rostock, and Department of Neurodegenerative Disease and Geriatric Psychiatry (C.N.W., M.T.H.), University of Bonn, Germany
HENEKA, Michael  ;  From the German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (T.F., G.D., C.N.W., M.T.H.), Bonn, Institute for Sociology and Demography (G.D.), University of Rostock, and Department of Neurodegenerative Disease and Geriatric Psychiatry (C.N.W., M.T.H.), University of Bonn, Germany. michael.heneka@ukb.uni-bonn.de
Co-auteurs externes :
yes
Langue du document :
Anglais
Titre :
Time course of dementia following sepsis in German health claims data.
Date de publication/diffusion :
janvier 2021
Titre du périodique :
Neurology: Neuroimmunology and Neuroinflammation
eISSN :
2332-7812
Maison d'édition :
NLM (Medline), Etats-Unis
Volume/Tome :
8
Fascicule/Saison :
1
Peer reviewed :
Peer reviewed vérifié par ORBi
Disponible sur ORBilu :
depuis le 08 mai 2024

Statistiques


Nombre de vues
36 (dont 0 Unilu)
Nombre de téléchargements
27 (dont 0 Unilu)

citations Scopus®
 
23
citations Scopus®
sans auto-citations
20
OpenCitations
 
10
citations OpenAlex
 
25
citations WoS
 
19

Bibliographie


Publications similaires



Contacter ORBilu