- Main
Subjective cognitive decline predicts longitudinal neuropsychological test performance in an unsupervised online setting in the Brain Health Registry.
- Kang, Jae;
- Manjavong, Manchumad;
- Jin, Chengshi;
- Diaz, Adam;
- Ashford, Miriam;
- Eichenbaum, Joseph;
- Thorp, Emily;
- Wragg, Elizabeth;
- Zavitz, Kenton;
- Cormack, Francesca;
- Aaronson, Anna;
- Mackin, R;
- Tank, Rachana;
- Landavazo, Bernard;
- Cavallone, Erika;
- Truran, Diana;
- Farias, Sarah;
- Weiner, Michael;
- Nosheny, Rachel
- et al.
Published Web Location
https://doi.org/10.1186/s13195-024-01641-2Abstract
BACKGROUNDS: Digital, online assessments are efficient means to detect early cognitive decline, but few studies have investigated the relationship between remotely collected subjective cognitive change and cognitive decline. We hypothesized that the Everyday Cognition Scale (ECog), a subjective change measure, predicts longitudinal change in cognition in the Brain Health Registry (BHR), an online registry for neuroscience research. METHODS: This study included BHR participants aged 55 + who completed both the baseline ECog and repeated administrations of the CANTAB® Paired Associates Learning (PAL) visual learning and memory test. Both self-reported ECog (Self-ECog) and study partner-reported ECog (SP-ECog), and two PAL scores (first attempt memory score [FAMS] and total errors adjusted [TEA]) were assessed. We estimated associations between multiple ECog scoring outputs (ECog positive [same or above cut-off score], ECog consistent [report of consistent decline in any item], and total score) and longitudinal change in PAL. Additionally we assessed the ability of ECog to identify decliners, who exhibited the worst PAL progression slopes corresponding to the fifth percentile and below. RESULTS: Participants (n = 16,683) had an average age of 69.07 ± 7.34, 72.04% were female, and had an average of 16.66 ± 2.26 years of education. They were followed for an average of 2.52 ± 1.63 visits over a period of 11.49 ± 11.53 months. Both Self-ECog positive (estimate = -0.01, p < 0.001, R²m = 0.56) and Self-ECog consistent (estimate=-0.01, p = 0.002, R²m = 0.56) were associated with longitudinal change in PAL FAMS after adjusting demographics and clinical confounders. Those who were Self-ECog total (Odds ratio [95% confidence interval] = 1.390 [1.121-1.708]) and SP-ECog consistent (2.417 [1.591-3.655]) had higher probability of being decliners based on PAL FAMS. CONCLUSION: In the BHRs unsupervised online setting, baseline subjective change was feasible in predicting longitudinal decline in neuropsychological tests. Online, self-administered measures of subjective cognitive change might have a potential to predict objective subjective change and identify individuals with cognitive impairments.
Many UC-authored scholarly publications are freely available on this site because of the UC's open access policies. Let us know how this access is important for you.
Main Content
Enter the password to open this PDF file:
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-