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Acute cognitive dysfunction, short and long-term outcomes and the impact of medical follow-up following hospitalisation for general medical illness in Cape Town, South Africa

Background. Delirium is an important and common general medical condition with a high morbidity and mortality rate independently associated with increases in the length of hospital stay, the requirement for institutional care, persistent cognitive deficits, and functional decline. The Gold standard...

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Main Author: Abdullah, Mohamed
Other Authors: Peter, Jonathan
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Medicine 2024
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access_status_str Open Access
author Abdullah, Mohamed
author2 Peter, Jonathan
author_browse Abdullah, Mohamed
Peter, Jonathan
author_facet Peter, Jonathan
Abdullah, Mohamed
author_sort Abdullah, Mohamed
collection Thesis
description Background. Delirium is an important and common general medical condition with a high morbidity and mortality rate independently associated with increases in the length of hospital stay, the requirement for institutional care, persistent cognitive deficits, and functional decline. The Gold standard for testing delirium continues to evolve but requires lengthy bedside cognitive testing by trained specialists. In a busy acute general medical setting, the use of these tools is impractical. Many alternatives and shorter tools have been developed for screening, diagnosis, and assessing the severity of delirium, but the majority have only been validated for use in geriatric populations or intensive care settings in developed countries. Objective. In this study, we validate the simple ‘RACY' 4-question delirium screening tool for use in general medical tertiary hospital admissions. Methods. This was a prospective observational cohort study conducted amongst acute general medical admissions at Groote Schuur Hospital, in Cape Town, South Africa, admitted between 30 September 2013 and 30 January 2014. ROC characteristics and diagnostic accuracy of the ‘RACY' 4-question delirium screening tool, sensitivity analysis of factors influencing RACY performance, and interrater agreement were obtained. Reference delirium testing was performed by neuropsychologists, using the Confusion Assessment Method. Results. A total of 609 medical in-patients were included. The prevalence of delirium was 16.9% (95% CI: 13.7-20.6, 82/485), and the median (IQR) age of admissions was 50 (36-65) years. The AUROC for RACY was 0.859. A cut-point of RACY ≤ 2 offered the best overall diagnostic utility classifying 8 out of 10 patients correctly with sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative likelihood ratios (+LR, -LR) of 74.4% (95% CI: 63.6-83.4, n/N: 61/82); 83.6% (95% CI: 79.6-87.5, n/N: 337/403); 4.5 (95% CI: 3.5-5.9); and 0.3 (95% CI: 0.2-0.4) respectively. Alternatively, a cut-point of RACY ≤ 3 optimised rule-out utility with a sensitivity and NPV of 94.0% (95% CI: 86.3-98.0, n/N: 77/82) and 97.6% (95% CI: 94.4-99.2, n/N: 201/206). RACY testing could be performed in less than a minute. Overall interrater agreement was 70% with a kappa of 0.55. Conclusions. The rapid RACY tool is a simple valid and reliable method to screen for delirium amongst new general medical admissions in a developing country setting.
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/39264 Acute cognitive dysfunction, short and long-term outcomes and the impact of medical follow-up following hospitalisation for general medical illness in Cape Town, South Africa Abdullah, Mohamed Peter, Jonathan Raubenheimer Peter Medicine Background. Delirium is an important and common general medical condition with a high morbidity and mortality rate independently associated with increases in the length of hospital stay, the requirement for institutional care, persistent cognitive deficits, and functional decline. The Gold standard for testing delirium continues to evolve but requires lengthy bedside cognitive testing by trained specialists. In a busy acute general medical setting, the use of these tools is impractical. Many alternatives and shorter tools have been developed for screening, diagnosis, and assessing the severity of delirium, but the majority have only been validated for use in geriatric populations or intensive care settings in developed countries. Objective. In this study, we validate the simple ‘RACY' 4-question delirium screening tool for use in general medical tertiary hospital admissions. Methods. This was a prospective observational cohort study conducted amongst acute general medical admissions at Groote Schuur Hospital, in Cape Town, South Africa, admitted between 30 September 2013 and 30 January 2014. ROC characteristics and diagnostic accuracy of the ‘RACY' 4-question delirium screening tool, sensitivity analysis of factors influencing RACY performance, and interrater agreement were obtained. Reference delirium testing was performed by neuropsychologists, using the Confusion Assessment Method. Results. A total of 609 medical in-patients were included. The prevalence of delirium was 16.9% (95% CI: 13.7-20.6, 82/485), and the median (IQR) age of admissions was 50 (36-65) years. The AUROC for RACY was 0.859. A cut-point of RACY ≤ 2 offered the best overall diagnostic utility classifying 8 out of 10 patients correctly with sensitivity, specificity, positive and negative likelihood ratios (+LR, -LR) of 74.4% (95% CI: 63.6-83.4, n/N: 61/82); 83.6% (95% CI: 79.6-87.5, n/N: 337/403); 4.5 (95% CI: 3.5-5.9); and 0.3 (95% CI: 0.2-0.4) respectively. Alternatively, a cut-point of RACY ≤ 3 optimised rule-out utility with a sensitivity and NPV of 94.0% (95% CI: 86.3-98.0, n/N: 77/82) and 97.6% (95% CI: 94.4-99.2, n/N: 201/206). RACY testing could be performed in less than a minute. Overall interrater agreement was 70% with a kappa of 0.55. Conclusions. The rapid RACY tool is a simple valid and reliable method to screen for delirium amongst new general medical admissions in a developing country setting. 2024-03-28T09:31:38Z 2024-03-28T09:31:38Z 2023 2024-03-28T08:06:43Z Thesis / Dissertation Masters MMed http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39264 eng application/pdf Department of Medicine Faculty of Health Sciences
spellingShingle Medicine
Abdullah, Mohamed
Acute cognitive dysfunction, short and long-term outcomes and the impact of medical follow-up following hospitalisation for general medical illness in Cape Town, South Africa
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Acute cognitive dysfunction, short and long-term outcomes and the impact of medical follow-up following hospitalisation for general medical illness in Cape Town, South Africa
title_full Acute cognitive dysfunction, short and long-term outcomes and the impact of medical follow-up following hospitalisation for general medical illness in Cape Town, South Africa
title_fullStr Acute cognitive dysfunction, short and long-term outcomes and the impact of medical follow-up following hospitalisation for general medical illness in Cape Town, South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Acute cognitive dysfunction, short and long-term outcomes and the impact of medical follow-up following hospitalisation for general medical illness in Cape Town, South Africa
title_short Acute cognitive dysfunction, short and long-term outcomes and the impact of medical follow-up following hospitalisation for general medical illness in Cape Town, South Africa
title_sort acute cognitive dysfunction short and long term outcomes and the impact of medical follow up following hospitalisation for general medical illness in cape town south africa
topic Medicine
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39264
work_keys_str_mv AT abdullahmohamed acutecognitivedysfunctionshortandlongtermoutcomesandtheimpactofmedicalfollowupfollowinghospitalisationforgeneralmedicalillnessincapetownsouthafrica