Measuring Dementia of the Alzheimer Type More Precisely

Alzheimer’s disease (AD) progressively impairs cognitive and functional abilities. Research on pharmacological treatment of AD is shifting to earlier forms of the disease, including preclinical stages. However, assessment methods traditionally used in clinical research may be inappropriate for these...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lowe, Deborah Anne
Other Authors: Balsis, Steve
Format: Others
Published: 2013
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/148262
id ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-148262
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-1482622013-12-12T03:55:33ZMeasuring Dementia of the Alzheimer Type More PreciselyLowe, Deborah Anneactivities of daily livingitem response theoryAlzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale-cognitivedementia of the Alzheimer typeAlzheimer's diseaseAlzheimer’s disease (AD) progressively impairs cognitive and functional abilities. Research on pharmacological treatment of AD is shifting to earlier forms of the disease, including preclinical stages. However, assessment methods traditionally used in clinical research may be inappropriate for these populations. The Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale-cognitive (ADAS-cog), a commonly used cognitive battery in AD research, is most sensitive in the moderate range of cognitive impairment. It focuses on immediate recall and recognition aspects of memory rather than retention and delayed recall. As clinical trials for dementia continue to focus on prodromal stages of AD, instruments need to be retooled to focus on cognitive abilities more prone to change in the earliest stages of the disease. One such domain is delayed recall, which is differentially sensitive to decline in the earliest stages of AD. A supplemental delayed recall subtest for the ADAS-cog is commonly implemented, but we do not know precisely where along the spectrum of cognitive dysfunction this subtest yields incremental information beyond what is gained from the standard ADAS-cog. An item response theory (IRT) approach can analyze this in a psychometrically rigorous way. This study’s aims are twofold: (1) to examine where along the AD spectrum the delayed recall subtest yields optimal information about cognitive dysfunction, and (2) to determine if adding delayed recall to the ADAS-cog can improve prediction of functional outcomes, specifically patients’ ability to complete basic and instrumental activities of daily living. Results revealed differential functioning of ADAS-cog subtests across the dimension of cognitive impairment. The delayed recall subtest provided optimal information and increased the ADAS-cog’s measurement precision in the relatively mild range of cognitive dysfunction. Moreover, the addition of delayed recall to the ADAS- cog, consistent with my hypothesis, increased covariation with instrumental but not basic activities of daily living. These findings provide evidence that the delayed recall subtest slightly improves the ADAS-cog’s ability to capture information about cognitive impairment in the mild range of severity and thereby improves prediction of instrumental functional deficits.Balsis, StevePeterson, RickWorthy, Darrell2013-03-14T16:18:30Z2012-122012-11-29December 20122013-03-14T16:18:30ZThesistextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/148262
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic activities of daily living
item response theory
Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale-cognitive
dementia of the Alzheimer type
Alzheimer's disease
spellingShingle activities of daily living
item response theory
Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale-cognitive
dementia of the Alzheimer type
Alzheimer's disease
Lowe, Deborah Anne
Measuring Dementia of the Alzheimer Type More Precisely
description Alzheimer’s disease (AD) progressively impairs cognitive and functional abilities. Research on pharmacological treatment of AD is shifting to earlier forms of the disease, including preclinical stages. However, assessment methods traditionally used in clinical research may be inappropriate for these populations. The Alzheimer Disease Assessment Scale-cognitive (ADAS-cog), a commonly used cognitive battery in AD research, is most sensitive in the moderate range of cognitive impairment. It focuses on immediate recall and recognition aspects of memory rather than retention and delayed recall. As clinical trials for dementia continue to focus on prodromal stages of AD, instruments need to be retooled to focus on cognitive abilities more prone to change in the earliest stages of the disease. One such domain is delayed recall, which is differentially sensitive to decline in the earliest stages of AD. A supplemental delayed recall subtest for the ADAS-cog is commonly implemented, but we do not know precisely where along the spectrum of cognitive dysfunction this subtest yields incremental information beyond what is gained from the standard ADAS-cog. An item response theory (IRT) approach can analyze this in a psychometrically rigorous way. This study’s aims are twofold: (1) to examine where along the AD spectrum the delayed recall subtest yields optimal information about cognitive dysfunction, and (2) to determine if adding delayed recall to the ADAS-cog can improve prediction of functional outcomes, specifically patients’ ability to complete basic and instrumental activities of daily living. Results revealed differential functioning of ADAS-cog subtests across the dimension of cognitive impairment. The delayed recall subtest provided optimal information and increased the ADAS-cog’s measurement precision in the relatively mild range of cognitive dysfunction. Moreover, the addition of delayed recall to the ADAS- cog, consistent with my hypothesis, increased covariation with instrumental but not basic activities of daily living. These findings provide evidence that the delayed recall subtest slightly improves the ADAS-cog’s ability to capture information about cognitive impairment in the mild range of severity and thereby improves prediction of instrumental functional deficits.
author2 Balsis, Steve
author_facet Balsis, Steve
Lowe, Deborah Anne
author Lowe, Deborah Anne
author_sort Lowe, Deborah Anne
title Measuring Dementia of the Alzheimer Type More Precisely
title_short Measuring Dementia of the Alzheimer Type More Precisely
title_full Measuring Dementia of the Alzheimer Type More Precisely
title_fullStr Measuring Dementia of the Alzheimer Type More Precisely
title_full_unstemmed Measuring Dementia of the Alzheimer Type More Precisely
title_sort measuring dementia of the alzheimer type more precisely
publishDate 2013
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/148262
work_keys_str_mv AT lowedeborahanne measuringdementiaofthealzheimertypemoreprecisely
_version_ 1716617319810072576