Delusional Disorder in Old Age: A Hypothesis-Driven Review of Recent Work Focusing on Epidemiology, Clinical Aspects, and Outcomes
Abstract
:1. Introduction
Aim
- (1)
- That incidence and prevalence and severity of symptoms increase with age;
- (2)
- That in old age, women are more vulnerable to DD than men;
- (3)
- That brain changes and cognitive defects predict poor treatment response;
- (4)
- That DD in old age is associated with self-harm and harm to others.
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Search Strategy
2.2. Inclusion Criteria
2.3. Data Collection and Extraction
2.4. Data Synthesis
3. Results
3.1. Prevalence and Sex Ratio in Elderly DD (Hypothesis 1 and 2)
3.2. Relationship of Brain Structure, Cognition and Treatment Response (Hypothesis 3)
3.3. DD in Old Age Is Associated with Self-Harm and Harm to Others (Hypothesis 4)
4. Discussion
Limitations and Strengths
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Authors and Year of Publication | Study Design | Method | Women (%), Age [Mean, (SD)] | Hypothesis Addressed |
---|---|---|---|---|
Hypotheses 1 and 2 | ||||
Castro-de-Araujo et al., 2020 [16] | Register study of mental-illness prevalence by diagnosis in the elderly | Outpatient visit rates of seniors over age 60 throughout Brazil | F = 340.250 (30.3%) | Suggests, but does not prove, higher-than-expected prevalence of DD in Brazilian seniors. No male/female differences are mentioned |
González-Rodríguez et al., 2015 [17] | Prospective observational study of women with DD, to determine the effect of pre- and postmenopausal onset | Consecutive cases of women assessed at baseline and after 24 months. | 80 (100%) 57 completed 2-year follow up. Premenopausal onset = 25 Postmenopausal onset + 55 | Women’s onset is more often postmenopausal, with symptom differences between pre- and postmenopausal onset |
Meesters et al., 2012 [18] | Case register study to determine 1 year prevalence, onset ages and sex ratios of patients with psychosis aged 60 and over | Search of the computerized mental health records over 1 year in Amsterdam | DD: n = 8 (4.4%) | 1 year prevalence of DD in old age was 0.03% and in women, was found only in those with onset over age 40. Very small numbers. |
Hypothesis 3 | ||||
Nagendra and Snowdon, 2020 [19] | Retrospective 12-year study of 55 DD patients over age 65 to study the effect of treatment | Follow up after a mean duration of 36.6 months | F = 39 (71%) Age = 74.5 (7.65) | Treatment response was 55%. Six patients developed cognitive impairments at follow up, but no association with treatment response was mentioned. |
Krämer et al., 2020 [20] | Cross-sectional study designed to study cerebellar dysfunction in psychosis, including somatic and nonsomatic DD | Structural MRI in DD somatic type, DD nonsomatic type, schizophrenia and healthy controls | DD somatic type: 8 (6 women) mean age: 72.6 (9.3) Nonsomatic DD: 13 females mean age: 55.9 | Substantial cerebellar impairment, particularly in DD somatic type, related to age but no mention of treatment response |
Dua and Grover, 2020 [21] | Case report of DD of long duration, with MRI brain changes | Woman with long-term delusion of pregnancy and resistance to treatment | 75-year-old woman with DD (delusions of pregnancy ICD-10) for 19 years | MRI brain changes potentially associated with lack of treatment response |
Wolf et al., 2020 [22] | Case series of patients with DD paranoid type in search of brain correlates | Brain structural neuroimaging study of patients and matched healthy controls | 14 patients Sex unspecified | Aberrant gray-matter volume in right prefrontal regions in paranoid type-DD. |
Van Asche et al., 2019 [23] | Case register study to differentiate 3 groups of late-life psychoses on the basis of symptoms, neuropsychological profile | Comparison of symptoms and neuropsychological profiles of functional and organic psychoses | n= 57 in very-late-onset SZ-like group. 77.8% were women. Mean age: 79.25 | Differences found in symptoms but not in cognitive profiles. Neither treatment responses nor sex differences were studied |
D’Auria et al., 2018 [24] | Case report of DD lasting 15 years with cortical atrophy and nonresponse to Rx | Woman with DD nonresponsive to psychotherapy and pharmacotherapy | 70-year-old woman with a 15-year history of delusional parasitosis. | CT: microvascular ischemic cortical changes and nonresponse. |
Fond et al., 2016 [25] | Retrospective 1-year study of cognition-impairing medications on function of patients aged 65 and over | Chart review of function in elderly psychiatric patients at hospital discharge | Total: n = 327 F = 62% Mean age: 73.9 | Cognition-impairing medications may reduce function. Precise diagnosis was unclear in this study |
Harris et al., 2014 [26] | Case series comparing cognitive deficits fin late-onset DD with those in Alzheimer’s disease | Memory clinic cases (19 DD, 20 AD) assessed by a comprehensive neuropsychological battery | Total DD: n = 19 Sex not specified | Significant cognitive impairment found in late onset DD, but correlation with treatment response was not attempted |
Wolf et al., 2013 [27] | Case series of patients with somatic DD to determine presence of neural correlates | Brain structural neuroimaging study of patients and matched controls | 16 patients with delusion of parasitosis; 9 were women. Mean age: 74.1 | Gray- and white-matter volume differences were found. Rx response not studied |
Ukai et al., 2013 [28] | Case report of effective treatment of long-term somatic-type DD with brain changes | 10-year history of DD somatic type (orofacial region) who, after many different treatment trials, responded. | Age: early 70s | Brain changes on MRI. Good response after 10 years due to milnacipran (25 mg/day) |
Hypothesis 4 | ||||
Machado et al., 2021 [29] | Case report of male DD in old age and the threat of violence | Case of DD jealous type, with potential aggression, and adverse effects of antipsychotics | 76-year-old man | DD can lead to physical aggression. The case also illustrates adverse effects of antipsychotics. |
Weise et al., 2020 [30] | Case report of stress-induced delusions, a suicide attempt and medication-free Rx | Woman with complex paranoid delusions and a suicide attempt triggered by stress | Age: mid-sixties woman with persecutory delusions (ICD-10) | Points to the threat of suicide in DD |
Snowdon, 2017 [31] | Case report: Woman with DD, hyperthyroidism and multiple suicide attempts | DD persecutory type, suicide attempts, eventual good response to treatment | Age: 65 | Points out suicide risk in DD |
(1) Incidence and prevalence of DD in old age | |
Prevalence of DD is underestimated in service-based studies. Higher rates of DD in this group are found in register studies. | |
(2) Gender aspects of DD in old age | |
Cases in women tend to begin after menopause. | |
(3) DD in old age is associated with brain changes and cognitive defects that may impair treatment | |
Microvascular ischemic findings (lacunar infarcts), cortical atrophy, alterations in gray- and white-matter volumes, and cerebellar dysfunctions have been reported, sometimes associated with poor treatment response. | |
(4) Self-harm and aggression in DD in old age | |
Prevention of suicide and violence in DD requires targeted intervention. |
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González-Rodríguez, A.; Seeman, M.V.; Izquierdo, E.; Natividad, M.; Guàrdia, A.; Román, E.; Monreal, J.A. Delusional Disorder in Old Age: A Hypothesis-Driven Review of Recent Work Focusing on Epidemiology, Clinical Aspects, and Outcomes. Int. J. Environ. Res. Public Health 2022, 19, 7911. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137911
González-Rodríguez A, Seeman MV, Izquierdo E, Natividad M, Guàrdia A, Román E, Monreal JA. Delusional Disorder in Old Age: A Hypothesis-Driven Review of Recent Work Focusing on Epidemiology, Clinical Aspects, and Outcomes. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. 2022; 19(13):7911. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137911
Chicago/Turabian StyleGonzález-Rodríguez, Alexandre, Mary V. Seeman, Eduard Izquierdo, Mentxu Natividad, Armand Guàrdia, Eloïsa Román, and José A. Monreal. 2022. "Delusional Disorder in Old Age: A Hypothesis-Driven Review of Recent Work Focusing on Epidemiology, Clinical Aspects, and Outcomes" International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health 19, no. 13: 7911. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137911
APA StyleGonzález-Rodríguez, A., Seeman, M. V., Izquierdo, E., Natividad, M., Guàrdia, A., Román, E., & Monreal, J. A. (2022). Delusional Disorder in Old Age: A Hypothesis-Driven Review of Recent Work Focusing on Epidemiology, Clinical Aspects, and Outcomes. International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, 19(13), 7911. https://doi.org/10.3390/ijerph19137911