The Mild Behavioral Impairment Checklist (MBI-C): A Rating Scale for Neuropsychiatric Symptoms in Pre-Dementia Populations

Zahinoor Ismail(University of Calgary), Luis Agüera-Ortíz(Centro de Investigación Biomédica en Red de Salud Mental), Henry Brodaty(Dementia Collaborative Research Centres), Alicja Cieślak(University of Calgary), Jeffrey L. Cummings(Lou Ruvo Brain Institute), Corinne E. Fischer(University of Toronto), Serge Gauthier(Douglas Mental Health University Institute), Yonas E. Geda(Mayo Clinic in Arizona), Nathan Herrmann(Health Sciences Centre), Jamila Kanji(University of Calgary), Krista L. Lanctôt(Sunnybrook Health Science Centre), David S. Miller, Moyra E. Mortby(Australian National University), Chiadi U. Onyike(Johns Hopkins University), Paul B. Rosenberg(Johns Hopkins University), Eric E. Smith(University of Calgary), Gwenn S. Smith(Johns Hopkins Medicine), David L. Sultzer(VA Greater Los Angeles Healthcare System), Constantine G. Lyketsos(GTx (United States))
Journal of Alzheimer s Disease
January 6, 2017
Cited by 546Open Access
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Abstract

BACKGROUND: Mild behavioral impairment (MBI) is a construct that describes the emergence at ≥50 years of age of sustained and impactful neuropsychiatric symptoms (NPS), as a precursor to cognitive decline and dementia. MBI describes NPS of any severity, which are not captured by traditional psychiatric nosology, persist for at least 6 months, and occur in advance of or in concert with mild cognitive impairment. While the detection and description of MBI has been operationalized in the International Society to Advance Alzheimer's Research and Treatment - Alzheimer's Association (ISTAART-AA) research diagnostic criteria, there is no instrument that accurately reflects MBI as described. OBJECTIVE: To develop an instrument based on ISTAART-AA MBI criteria. METHODS: Eighteen subject matter experts participated in development using a modified Delphi process. An iterative process ensured items reflected the five MBI domains of 1) decreased motivation; 2) emotional dysregulation; 3) impulse dyscontrol; 4) social inappropriateness; and 5) abnormal perception or thought content. Instrument language was developed a priori to pertain to non-demented functionally independent older adults. RESULTS: We present the Mild Behavioral Impairment Checklist (MBI-C), a 34-item instrument, which can easily be completed by a patient, close informant, or clinician. CONCLUSION: The MBI-C provides the first measure specifically developed to assess the MBI construct as explicitly described in the criteria. Its utility lies in MBI case detection, and monitoring the emergence of MBI symptoms and domains over time. Studies are required to determine the prognostic value of MBI for dementia development, and for predicting different dementia subtypes.


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