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Feasibility and acceptability of remote smartphone cognitive testing in frontotemporal dementia research

Authors :
Jack Carson Taylor
Hilary W. Heuer
Annie L. Clark
Amy B. Wise
Masood Manoochehri
Leah Forsberg
Carly Mester
Meghana Rao
Daniell Brushaber
Joel Kramer
Ariane E. Welch
John Kornak
Walter Kremers
Brian Appleby
Bradford C. Dickerson
Kimiko Domoto‐Reilly
Julie A. Fields
Nupur Ghoshal
Neill Graff‐Radford
Murray Grossman
Matthew GH Hall
Edward D. Huey
David Irwin
Maria I. Lapid
Irene Litvan
Ian R. Mackenzie
Joseph C. Masdeu
Mario F. Mendez
Naomi Nevler
Chiadi U. Onyike
Belen Pascual
Peter Pressman
Katherine P. Rankin
Buddhika Ratnasiri
Julio C. Rojas
Maria Carmela Tartaglia
Bonnie Wong
Maria Luisa Gorno‐Tempini
Bradley F. Boeve
Howard J. Rosen
Adam L. Boxer
Adam M. Staffaroni
Source :
Alzheimer’s & Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment & Disease Monitoring, Vol 15, Iss 2, Pp n/a-n/a (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Wiley, 2023.

Abstract

Abstract Introduction Remote smartphone assessments of cognition, speech/language, and motor functioning in frontotemporal dementia (FTD) could enable decentralized clinical trials and improve access to research. We studied the feasibility and acceptability of remote smartphone data collection in FTD research using the ALLFTD Mobile App (ALLFTD‐mApp). Methods A diagnostically mixed sample of 214 participants with FTD or from familial FTD kindreds (asymptomatic: CDR®+NACC‐FTLD = 0 [N = 101]; prodromal: 0.5 [N = 49]; symptomatic ≥1 [N = 51]; not measured [N = 13]) were asked to complete ALLFTD‐mApp tests on their smartphone three times within 12 days. They completed smartphone familiarity and participation experience surveys. Results It was feasible for participants to complete the ALLFTD‐mApp on their own smartphones. Participants reported high smartphone familiarity, completed ∼ 70% of tasks, and considered the time commitment acceptable (98% of respondents). Greater disease severity was associated with poorer performance across several tests. Discussion These findings suggest that the ALLFTD‐mApp study protocol is feasible and acceptable for remote FTD research. HIGHLIGHTS The ALLFTD Mobile App is a smartphone‐based platform for remote, self‐administered data collection. The ALLFTD Mobile App consists of a comprehensive battery of surveys and tests of executive functioning, memory, speech and language, and motor abilities. Remote digital data collection using the ALLFTD Mobile App was feasible in a multicenter research consortium that studies FTD. Data was collected in healthy controls and participants with a range of diagnoses, particularly FTD spectrum disorders. Remote digital data collection was well accepted by participants with a variety of diagnoses.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
23528729
Volume :
15
Issue :
2
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Alzheimer’s & Dementia: Diagnosis, Assessment & Disease Monitoring
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.b1152f42564be09bd4bebba08f13f1
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/dad2.12423