Associations of self- and informant-reported functional impairment with cognitive performance and incident dementia
Yaqing Gao, Paola Zaninotto, Andrew Steptoe

TL;DR
Informant reports of daily living impairments, especially those involving memory and money management, are better indicators of dementia risk than self-reports.
Contribution
The study identifies specific informant-reported IADLs as stronger predictors of cognitive decline and dementia, independent of socioeconomic and health factors.
Findings
Informant-reported IADLs, particularly those involving episodic and visuospatial memory, show the strongest associations with dementia risk.
Associations are stronger when informants are highly educated or in daily contact with the individual.
Self-reported measures are less effective in capturing cognitive impairment or dementia risk.
Abstract
•ADL and IADL impairment proportions were similar across self- and informant-reports, but concordance between them was modest.•Self-reported measures of functional impairment appeared limited in capturing poor cognition or dementia risk, whereas informant-reports showed stronger and more consistent associations.•The strongest associations were observed for informant-reported IADLs involving episodic and visuospatial memory.•Associations were independent of socioeconomic, lifestyle, and health factors.•Associations were stronger among individuals with intermediate education and when informants were highly educated or in daily contact. ADL and IADL impairment proportions were similar across self- and informant-reports, but concordance between them was modest. Self-reported measures of functional impairment appeared limited in capturing poor cognition or dementia risk, whereas…
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Taxonomy
TopicsDementia and Cognitive Impairment Research · Alzheimer's disease research and treatments · Elder Abuse and Neglect
