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Cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease: Associations between subjective and objective cognitive decline in a large longitudinal study

Published Web Location

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/32987359/
No data is associated with this publication.
Abstract

Background

Cognitive decline creates substantial morbidity and cost in Parkinson's disease (PD) and clinicians have limited tools for counseling patients on prognosis. We aimed to use data from a randomized, controlled trial of isradipine in Parkinson's disease (STEADY-PD III) to determine which objective cognitive domain deficits drive patient complaints of cognitive symptoms.

Methods

Neuro-Quality of Life (Neuro-QoL) Cognition: General Concerns (GC), and Cognition: Executive Function (EF) (subjective measures), were administered at baseline, 1, 2, and 3 years in 324 people with PD. Baseline Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) was divided into 4 domains: visuospatial/executive, memory, attention, and language (objective measures). Spearman rank correlations and multiple regression models adjusted for other clinical variables evaluated associations between baseline Neuro-QoL domains and individual MoCA domains. Multiple regression models evaluated the association between baseline MoCA domain performance and Neuro-QoL change over three years. Cox proportional hazards predicted development of PD-MCI based on baseline and time-varying Neuro-QoL reporting.

Results

Higher MoCA memory performance was associated with better Neuro-QoL-GC (β = 0.75, SE = 0.391, p = 0.05) and Neuro-QoL-EF (β = 0.81, SE = 0.36, p = 0.02) at baseline. There was a trend for baseline MoCA memory to predict the degree of subjective cognitive decline on the Neuro-QoL-EF (β = 0.70, SE = 0.42, p = 0.09). Baseline depression and anticholinergic use were associated with worsened Neuro-QoL-EF and Neuro-QoL-GC. Increasing subjective cognitive complaints in Neuro-QoL-EF were associated with development of PD-MCI over 3 years of follow-up (HR = 0.95, CI = 0.90-1.0, p = 0.039).

Conclusions

Objective memory impairment may be a stronger predictor than executive or visuospatial dysfunction for the presence of subjective cognitive complaints in early PD.

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