Approaches to diagnosing dementia syndrome in general practice: Determining the value of gestalt judgment, clinical history and tests.

Award Number
108804/Z/15/Z
Status / Stage
Completed
Dates
14 September 2015 -
13 March 2021
Duration (calculated)
05 years 05 months
Funder(s)
Wellcome Trust
Funding Amount
£321,248.00
Contracted Centre
University of Bristol
Contracted Centre Webpage
Principal Investigator
Dr Sam Creavin
PI Contact
Sam.Creavin@bristol.ac.uk
PI ORCID
0000-0002-6772-7111
WHO Catergories
Development of clinical assessment of cognition and function
Methodologies and approaches for risk reduction research
Disease Type
Dementia (Unspecified)

CPEC Review Info
Reference ID308
ResearcherReside Team
Published12/06/2023

Data

Award Number108804/Z/15/Z
Status / StageCompleted
Start Date20150914
End Date20210313
Duration (calculated) 05 years 05 months
Contracted CentreUniversity of Bristol
Contracted Centre Webpage
Funding Amount£321,248.00

Aims

I will investigate whether an evaluation in general practice can have comparable test accuracy to a specialist opinion for diagnosing dementia in symptomatic elderly people. Objective 1: I will systematically review the test accuracy of general practitioners gestalt clinical judgment for the diagnosis of dementia in symptomatic primary care patients and, if indicated, perform a meta-analysis. My hypothesis is that the utility of the gestalt clinical judgment of general practitioners in diagn osing dementia is better than chance but inferior to specialist assessment. Objective 2: I will conduct an empirical, prospective, diagnostic test accuracy (DTA) study comparing GP gut feeling , blood tests, neuroimaging, index collection of cognitive tests suitable for GPs and specialist assessment to a reference consensus expert panel diagnosis. I will identify the most useful components of a diagnostic evaluation in general practice. My hypothesis is that a combination of brief cognitive tests adds diagnostic value to a GP’s gestalt judgment. Objective 3: I will conduct exploratory qualitative research to evaluate the feasibility and acceptability of GP diagnosis of dementia for patients and clinicians, based on the set of tests that I identify as most useful.