Title Odor discrimination as a marker of early Alzheimer’s disease /
Authors Audronytė, Eglė ; Pakulaitė-Kazlienė, Gytė ; Sutnikienė, Vaiva ; Kaubrys, Gintaras Ferdinandas
DOI 10.3233/JAD-230077
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Is Part of Journal of Alzheimer's disease.. Amsterdam : IOS Press. 2023, vol. 94, iss. 3, p. 1169-1178.. ISSN 1387-2877. eISSN 1875-8908
Keywords [eng] Alzheimer’s disease ; mild cognitive impairment ; olfaction ; olfactory impairment
Abstract [eng] Background: Olfactory dysfunction is an early symptom of Alzheimer’s disease (AD). However, olfactory tests are rarely performed in clinical practice because their diagnostic efficacy in detecting early AD is unclear. Objective: To investigate odor discrimination in patients with early AD and the efficacy of olfactory discrimination tests in differentiating these patients from subjects with normal cognition (CN). Methods: Thirty patients each with mild dementia due to AD (MD-AD) and mild cognitive impairment due to AD (MCI-AD) and 30 older subjects with CN were enrolled. All participants underwent cognitive examinations (CDR, MMSE, ADAS-Cog 13, and verbal fluency) and odor discrimination tests (Sniffin’ Sticks test, Burghart®, Germany). Results: The MD-AD group achieved significantly worse scores on the olfactory discrimination test than the MCI-AD group, and the MCI-AD group achieved significantly worse results than the CN group (p < 0.05). A cut-off score of≤10 had a diagnostic accuracy of 94.44% (95% CI, 87.51–98.17%) in differentiating patients with MCI-AD/MD-AD from subjects with CN and of 91.67% (95% CI, 81.61–97.24%) in differentiating those with MCI-AD from subjects with CN. Our multinomial logistic regression model with demographic data and ADAS-Cog 13 scores as predictor variables correctly classified 82.2% of the cases (CN, 93.3%; MC-AD, 70%; MD-AD, 83.3%); on adding the olfactory discrimination score to the model, the percentage increased to 92.2% (CN, 96.7%; MCI-AD, 86.7%; MD-AD, 93.3%). Conclusion: Odor discrimination is impaired in cases of early AD and continues to deteriorate as the disease progresses. The olfactory discrimination test showed good diagnostic efficacy in detecting early AD.
Published Amsterdam : IOS Press
Type Journal article
Language English
Publication date 2023
CC license CC license description