MedPath

Identification of Neurocognitive Disorders by General Practitioners in Primary Care

Not Applicable
Recruiting
Conditions
Neurocognitive Disorders
Interventions
Other: complaint, cognitive and functional assessments
Registration Number
NCT03678376
Lead Sponsor
Hospices Civils de Lyon
Brief Summary

Neurocognitive disorders (NCD) are today often largely underdiagnosed or diagnosed in late stages in France. Indeed the ALzheimer COoperative Valuation in Europe (ALCOVE) study stated that about 50% of people living with NCD remain undiagnosed until late severe stages with a deep autonomy loss inducing at risk behaviours and/or behavioural crisis. The French High Authority of Health (Haute Autorité de Santé - HAS) and ALCOVE recommend a timely diagnosis at a time when the specific intervention help to implement secondary or tertiary prevention dynamics that would delay severe complications and help to maintain a reasonable quality of life for both the patient and the caregiver. Moreover, the representatives of the National College of General Practitioners, the French Federation of Memory Centres, the French Federation of Gerontology and Geriatrics, the French Federation of Neurology, the French Society of Psychogeriatrics and the National Plan on Neurodegenerative Diseases designed a hierarchized and tailored diagnosis strategy of NCD promoting a shared diagnosis between the General Practitioner (GP) and specialists of NCD. It therefore appears crucial to determine the diagnosis value of a short duration strategy assessing the complaint, cognition and autonomy in primary care to detect NCD and referring to a specialist to perform the etiological diagnosis. The identification of NCD by GP in primary care (TROCOMEGE) study aims at assessing the positive and negative predictive values of a NCD diagnosis strategy through the assessment of the subjective memory complaint, the cognitive status and the autonomy level in primary care. It relies on the clinical impression of the GP, a cognitive complaint interview for complaint and functional assessment thanks to the General Practitioner assessment of Cognition (GP-Cog, part 2) tool and the cognitive assessment thanks to the Six-Item Cognitive Impairment test (6-CIT).

Detailed Description

Not available

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
RECRUITING
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
1018
Inclusion Criteria
  • Patient aged 65 and over,
  • Patient expressing a cognitive complaint (memory, language, sense of time and place disorientation for example) to his/her general practitioner; the complaint can be provided by an informal caregiver and /or, presenting with "at risk" behaviour* possibly related to a NCD (mistaking medicine or forgetting medical consultation, forgetting hot meals, losing him/herself for example...),
  • Patients able to understand the specifications of the study and to realize it (vision, audition, language...)
  • Patient who has been informed and has consented to the study (himself/herself and by a trusted person/a family member if applicable) as established by the "article L. 1121-8 du Code de la Santé Publique".
  • Registered with a social security system
Exclusion Criteria
  • Institutionalized patients
  • Patients unable to understand the purpose of the study,
  • Patients with neurocognitive disorders already diagnosed
  • Patients under legal protection
  • Patients with auditory or visual disorders which do not allow to perform the assessment
  • Patients who do not want to go to the Memory Clinic
  • Patients with severe disease commit the prognosis in relatively short term
  • Participation to another trial that would interfere with the present study
  • Patient with severe anxiety or depression preventing from any reliable neuropsychological assessment.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
SINGLE_GROUP
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
complaint, cognitive and functional assessmentscomplaint, cognitive and functional assessmentsAll patients will be included in a single arm. They will complete an evaluation with their General Practitioner, followed by an evaluation at the Memory Clinic with a specialist (neurologist, geriatrician or psychiatrist).
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
NCD diagnosis established by the GP using the GP-Cog part 2At inclusion

* a GP-cog score of 0-3 means no significant cognitive impairment

* a GP-cog score of 4-6 means significant cognitive complaint

NCD diagnosis established by the GP by clinical impressonAt inclusion

the GP will have to respond to the following issues 1- Does he think the patient presents a suspect cognitive complaint (Yes/No) 2- does he think the patient presents with a NCD (Yes/No),

NCD diagnosis established by the GP using the 6-CIT testAt inclusion

* a 6-CIT score between 0 and 7 means normal, referral not indicated at present

* a 6-CIT score between 8 and 28 means mild or significant cognitive impairment

NCD diagnosis established in the memory clinics as reference by the Neuropsychologist using the DSM-5at 3 months
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
minor or major NCD diagnosis established by the neuropsychologist using the DSM-5At 3 months
level of cognitive performance established with the Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE)At 3 months

A MMSE\<18 being is considered as abnormal, MMSE between 18-23 is considered as questionable and MMSE \>=24 is considered as normal)

minor or major NCD diagnosis established by the GPAt inclusion
diagnosis value of each components of the GP strategy solely or in combinationAt inclusion

Sensitivity, Specificity, Positive Predictive Value, Negative Predictive Value, likelihood ratios will be calculated.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Hôpital des Charpennes

🇫🇷

Villeurbanne, France

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath