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Detecting Mild Cognitive Deficits in Parkinson's Disease: Comparison of Neuropsychological Tests

Authors :
Hoogland, Jeroen
van Wanrooij, Lennard L
Boel, Judith A
Goldman, Jennifer G
Stebbins, Glenn T
Dalrymple-Alford, John C
Marras, Connie
Adler, Charles H
Junque, Carme
Pedersen, Kenn F
Mollenhauer, Brit
Zabetian, Cyrus P
Eslinger, Paul J
Lewis, Simon JG
Wu, Ruey-Meei
Klein, Martin
Rodriguez-Oroz, Maria C
Cammisuli, Davide M
Barone, Paolo
Biundo, Roberta
de Bie, Rob MA
Schmand, Ben A
Tröster, Alexander I
Burn, David J
Litvan, Irene
Filoteo, J Vincent
Geurtsen, Gert J
Weintraub, Daniel
IPMDS Study Group 'Validation of Mild Cognitive Impairment in Parkinson Disease'
Source :
Movement disorders : official journal of the Movement Disorder Society, vol 33, iss 11
Publication Year :
2018
Publisher :
eScholarship, University of California, 2018.

Abstract

BackgroundNumerous neuropsychological tests and test versions are used in Parkinson's disease research, but their relative capacity to detect mild cognitive deficits and their comparability across studies are unknown. The objective of this study was to identify neuropsychological tests that consistently detect cognitive decline in PD across studies.MethodsData from 30 normed neuropsychological tests across 20 international studies in up to 2908 nondemented PD patients were analyzed. A subset of 17 tests was administered to up to 1247 healthy controls. A 2-step meta-analytic approach using standardized scores compared performance in PD with normative data.ResultsPooled estimates of the differences between PD and site-specific healthy controls identified significant cognitive deficits in PD patients on 14 test scores across 5 commonly assessed cognitive domains (attention or working memory, executive, language, memory, and visuospatial abilities), but healthy control performance was statistically above average on 7 of these tests. Analyses based on published norms only, as opposed to direct assessment of healthy controls, showed high between-study variability that could not be accounted for and led to inconclusive results.ConclusionsNormed neuropsychological tests across multiple cognitive domains consistently detect cognitive deficits in PD when compared with site-specific healthy control performance, but relative PD performance was significantly affected by the inclusion and type of healthy controls versus the use of published norms only. Additional research is needed to identify a cognitive battery that can be administered in multisite international studies and that is sensitive to cognitive decline, responsive to therapeutic interventions, and superior to individual cognitive tests. © 2018 International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Movement disorders : official journal of the Movement Disorder Society, vol 33, iss 11
Accession number :
edsair.od.......325..38fc6e83be4db85f63e5b6d84716153a