Olfactory testing in consecutive patients referred with suspected dementia

Abstract Background Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia and early and accurate diagnosis is important. Olfactory dysfunction is an early sign of AD. The contribution by test of olfactory function has been surveyed in AD vs a line of conditions but remains to be settled in t...

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Main Authors: Ib Thrane Christensen, Elna-Marie Larsson, Ida E. Holm, Ole B.F. Nielsen, Stig Andersen
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2017-06-01
Series:BMC Geriatrics
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12877-017-0516-2
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spelling doaj-9b2c8089958f4aa8b5c4bde0f6eab6bc2020-11-25T03:57:33ZengBMCBMC Geriatrics1471-23182017-06-011711710.1186/s12877-017-0516-2Olfactory testing in consecutive patients referred with suspected dementiaIb Thrane Christensen0Elna-Marie Larsson1Ida E. Holm2Ole B.F. Nielsen3Stig Andersen4Department of Geriatric Medicine, Aalborg University HospitalDepartment of Radiology, Aalborg University HospitalDepartment of Pathology, Aalborg University HospitalDepartment of Geriatric Medicine, Aalborg University HospitalDepartment of Geriatric Medicine, Aalborg University HospitalAbstract Background Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia and early and accurate diagnosis is important. Olfactory dysfunction is an early sign of AD. The contribution by test of olfactory function has been surveyed in AD vs a line of conditions but remains to be settled in the workup of unselected patients referred with suspected dementia. Methods We performed a two-step investigation: first, a comparative study of healthy controls and probable AD patients to test the applicability of the chosen scents (cuisine study); second, a study of consecutive patients referred to our geriatric outpatient clinic for suspected dementia with the investigating personnel blinded to the results of the Olfactory Test (blinded study). Results The sum of scents detected discriminated patients with probable AD from controls in the cuisine study (n = 40; p < 0.001; area under ROC curve 0.94). In the blinded study (n = 50) the diagnosis was probable AD in 48%, minimal cognitive impairment in 24%, vascular dementia in 8%, alcohol induced impairment in 12%, depression in 4%, and Parkinson’s disease and Lewy body dementia in 2%. Area under the ROC-curve was 0.67. The odds ratio for probable AD with 2+ smell errors was 12 (95%-CI: 1.3–101; p = 0.026 (reference 0–1 smell errors)) age adjusted. None in the AD group had zero smell errors (Negative Predictive Value 100%). Conclusion Olfactory testing may support to dismiss the diagnosis of probable AD in the workup of a mixed group of patients referred with cognitive impairment. Still, it had a low sensitivity for probable AD.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12877-017-0516-2DementiaAlzheimer’s diseaseCognitive impairmentOlfactory dysfunctionPocket smell testBlinded study
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ib Thrane Christensen
Elna-Marie Larsson
Ida E. Holm
Ole B.F. Nielsen
Stig Andersen
spellingShingle Ib Thrane Christensen
Elna-Marie Larsson
Ida E. Holm
Ole B.F. Nielsen
Stig Andersen
Olfactory testing in consecutive patients referred with suspected dementia
BMC Geriatrics
Dementia
Alzheimer’s disease
Cognitive impairment
Olfactory dysfunction
Pocket smell test
Blinded study
author_facet Ib Thrane Christensen
Elna-Marie Larsson
Ida E. Holm
Ole B.F. Nielsen
Stig Andersen
author_sort Ib Thrane Christensen
title Olfactory testing in consecutive patients referred with suspected dementia
title_short Olfactory testing in consecutive patients referred with suspected dementia
title_full Olfactory testing in consecutive patients referred with suspected dementia
title_fullStr Olfactory testing in consecutive patients referred with suspected dementia
title_full_unstemmed Olfactory testing in consecutive patients referred with suspected dementia
title_sort olfactory testing in consecutive patients referred with suspected dementia
publisher BMC
series BMC Geriatrics
issn 1471-2318
publishDate 2017-06-01
description Abstract Background Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is the most common cause of dementia and early and accurate diagnosis is important. Olfactory dysfunction is an early sign of AD. The contribution by test of olfactory function has been surveyed in AD vs a line of conditions but remains to be settled in the workup of unselected patients referred with suspected dementia. Methods We performed a two-step investigation: first, a comparative study of healthy controls and probable AD patients to test the applicability of the chosen scents (cuisine study); second, a study of consecutive patients referred to our geriatric outpatient clinic for suspected dementia with the investigating personnel blinded to the results of the Olfactory Test (blinded study). Results The sum of scents detected discriminated patients with probable AD from controls in the cuisine study (n = 40; p < 0.001; area under ROC curve 0.94). In the blinded study (n = 50) the diagnosis was probable AD in 48%, minimal cognitive impairment in 24%, vascular dementia in 8%, alcohol induced impairment in 12%, depression in 4%, and Parkinson’s disease and Lewy body dementia in 2%. Area under the ROC-curve was 0.67. The odds ratio for probable AD with 2+ smell errors was 12 (95%-CI: 1.3–101; p = 0.026 (reference 0–1 smell errors)) age adjusted. None in the AD group had zero smell errors (Negative Predictive Value 100%). Conclusion Olfactory testing may support to dismiss the diagnosis of probable AD in the workup of a mixed group of patients referred with cognitive impairment. Still, it had a low sensitivity for probable AD.
topic Dementia
Alzheimer’s disease
Cognitive impairment
Olfactory dysfunction
Pocket smell test
Blinded study
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12877-017-0516-2
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