4.7 Article

The relative contributions of biomarkers, disease modifying treatment, and dementia severity to Alzheimer's stigma: A vignette-based experiment

Journal

SOCIAL SCIENCE & MEDICINE
Volume 292, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PERGAMON-ELSEVIER SCIENCE LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.socscimed.2021.114620

Keywords

Alzheimer's biomarkers; Preclinical Alzheimer's; Stigma; Treatment

Funding

  1. Alzheimer's Association [AARF-17-528,934]
  2. University of Pennsylvania Alzheimer's Disease Center [NIA P30AG 010124]
  3. Alzheimer's Foundation of America
  4. CDC Healthy Aging Program-Healthy Brain Initiative
  5. National Institute on Aging [1K23AG065442, K01AG064123]
  6. Greenwall Faculty Scholars Program
  7. [U48 DP -005053]

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The stigma of dementia spills over into preclinical AD, and the availability of treatment does not alter that stigma.
Objective: The symptoms and prognosis of Alzheimer's disease (AD) dementia contribute to the public's negative reactions toward individuals with AD dementia and their families. But what if, using AD biomarker tests, diagnosis was made before the onset of dementia, and a disease-modifying treatment was available? This study tests the hypotheses that a preclinical diagnosis of AD and treatment that improves prognosis will mitigate stigmatizing reactions. Methods: A sample of U.S. adults were randomized to receive one vignette created by a 3 x 2 x 2 vignette-based experiment that described a person with varied clinical symptom severity (Clinical Dementia Rating stages 0 (no dementia), 1 (mild), or 2 (moderate)), AD biomarker test results (positive vs negative), and disease-modifying treatment (available vs not available). Between-group comparisons were conducted of scores on the Modified Family Stigma in Alzheimer's Disease Scale (FS-ADS).Results: The sample of 1,817 adults had a mean age two years younger than that of U.S. adults but was otherwise similar to the general adult population. The response rate was 63% and the completion rate was 96%. In comparisons of randomized groups, mild and moderate symptoms of dementia evoked stronger reactions on all FS-ADS domains compared to no dementia (all p < 0.001). A positive biomarker test result evoked stronger reactions on all but one FS-ADS domain (negative aesthetic attributions) compared to a negative biomarker result (all p < 0.001). Disease-modifying treatment had no measurable influence on stigma (all p > 0.05).Conclusions: The stigmas of dementia spill over into preclinical AD, and availability of treatment does not alter that stigma. Translation of the preclinical AD construct from research into practice will require interventions that mitigate AD stigma to preserve the dignity and identity of individuals living with AD.

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