纽约市消防局(FDNY)和一般紧急救援人员中受世贸中心影响者的轻度和严重认知障碍发生率

Frank D Mann, Alexandra K. Mueller, Rachel Zeig-Owens, Jaeun Choi, David J. Prezant, Melissa M. Carr, Alicia M. Fels, Christina M. Hennington, Megan P. Armstrong, Alissa Barber, Ashley E. Fontana, Cassandra H. Kroll, Kevin Chow, Onix A Melendez, Abigail J. Smith, Benjamin J Luft, Charles B. Hall, Sean Clouston
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:应对世界贸易中心(WTC)袭击事件的应急人员承受了严重的职业暴露,但在受到 WTC 暴露的 FDNY 应急人员中,认知障碍的发生率仍然未知。本研究使用客观测试筛查了受 WTC 影响的 FDNY 响应者中的轻度和重度认知障碍,将患病率与非受 FDNY WTC 影响的响应者队列进行了比较,并对全球、社区和临床人群中 MCI 的元分析估计值进行了描述性比较。研究方法我们招募了受世界贸易中心影响的美国联邦纽约州受访者样本(n = 343),让他们完成一系列认知、心理和身体测试。根据常模参照测试的结果估算了特定领域损伤的患病率,并采用蒙特利尔认知评估(MoCA)、Jak/Bondi 标准、Petersen 标准以及美国国家老龄化研究所和阿尔茨海默氏症协会(NIA-AA)标准来诊断 MCI。NIA-AA 标准也用于诊断严重认知障碍。我们使用广义线性模型将认知功能障碍的患病率估计值与在类似时间段内完成 MoCA 测试的普通响应者队列(GRC;n = 7102)中大量受 WTC 影响的非 FDNY 响应者样本进行比较:在 65 岁以下的 FDNY 受访者中,根据 MCI 的操作定义,未经调整的 MCI 患病率从 52.57% 到 71.37% 不等,除了使用保守的 MoCA 总分截止值(18 < MoCA < 23)之外,与其他标准相比,该标准产生的粗患病率(24.31%)明显较低。与受到 WTC 影响的非 FDNY-GRC 反应者相比,受到 WTC 影响的 FDNY 反应者的 MCI 患病率更高(调整后 RR = 1.53,95% C.I. = [1.24,1.88],p < .001),而且来自不同全球、社区和临床人群的元分析估计值也更高。根据 NIA-AA 诊断指南,4.96% 的 WTC 暴露-FDNY 反应者符合严重损伤标准(95% CI = [2.91% to 7.82%]),在排除 65 岁以上的反应者后,这一流行率基本保持不变。讨论:在世界贸易中心救灾人员中,轻度和重度认知功能障碍的发生率很高,这凸显了职业/环境和灾难相关暴露在加速认知功能衰退的病因中可能扮演的角色。
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Prevalence of Mild and Severe Cognitive Impairment in World Trade Center Exposed Fire Department of the City of New York (FDNY) and General Emergency Responders
Background: The emergency personnel who responded to the World Trade Center (WTC) attacks endured severe occupational exposures, yet the prevalence of cognitive impairment remains unknown among WTC-exposed-FDNY-responders. The present study screened for mild and severe cognitive impairment in WTC-exposed FDNY responders using objective tests, compared prevalence rates to a cohort of non-FDNY WTC-exposed responders, and descriptively to meta-analytic estimates of MCI from global, community, and clinical populations. Methods: A sample of WTC-exposed-FDNY responders (n = 343) was recruited to complete an extensive battery of cognitive, psychological, and physical tests. The prevalences of domain-specific impairments were estimated based on the results of norm-referenced tests, and the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), Jak/Bondi criteria, Petersen criteria, and the National Institute on Aging and Alzheimer′s Association (NIA-AA) criteria were used to diagnose MCI. NIA-AA criteria were also used to diagnose severe cognitive impairment. Generalized linear models were used to compare prevalence estimates of cognitive impairment to a large sample of WTC-exposed-non-FDNY responders from the General Responder Cohort (GRC; n = 7102) who completed the MoCA during a similar time frame. Result: Among FDNY responders under 65 years, the unadjusted prevalence of MCI varied from 52.57% to 71.37% depending on the operational definition of MCI, apart from using a conservative cut-off applied to MoCA total scores (18 < MoCA < 23), which yielded a markedly lower crude prevalence (24.31%) compared to alternative criteria. The prevalence of MCI was higher among WTC-exposed-FDNY-responders, compared to WTC-exposed-non-FDNY-GRC-responders (adjusted RR = 1.53, 95% C.I. = [1.24, 1.88], p < .001) and meta-analytic estimates from different global, community, and clinical populations. Following NIA-AA diagnostic guidelines, 4.96% of WTC-exposed-FDNY-responders met the criteria for severe impairments (95% CI = [2.91% to 7.82%]), a prevalence that remained largely unchanged after excluding responders over the age of 65 years. Discussion: There is a high prevalence of mild and severe cognitive impairment among WTC-responders highlighting the putative role of occupational/environmental and disaster-related exposures in the etiology of accelerated cognitive decline.
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