Development of robust normative data for the neuropsychological assessment of Greek older adults.

IF 2.6 4区 心理学 Q2 CLINICAL NEUROLOGY Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society Pub Date : 2024-07-01 Epub Date: 2024-01-29 DOI:10.1017/S1355617723011499
Xanthi Arampatzi, Eleni S Margioti, Lambros Messinis, Mary Yannakoulia, Georgios Hadjigeorgiou, Efthimios Dardiotis, Paraskevi Sakka, Nikolaos Scarmeas, Mary H Kosmidis
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Abstract

Objective: Normative data for older adults may be tainted by inadvertent inclusion of undiagnosed individuals at the very early stage of a neurodegenerative process. To avoid this pitfall, we developed norms for a cohort of older adults without MCI/dementia at 3-year follow-up.

Methods: A randomly selected sample of 1041 community-dwelling individuals (age ≥ 65) received a full neurological and neuropsychological examination on two occasions [mean interval = 3.1 (SD = 0.9) years].

Results: Of these, 492 participants (Group 1; 65-87 years old) were without dementia on both evaluations (CDR=0 and MMSE ≥ 26); their baseline data were used for norms development. Group 2 (n = 202) met the aforementioned criteria only at baseline, but not at follow-up. Multiple linear regressions included demographic predictors for regression-based normative formulae and raw test scores as dependent variables for each test variable separately. Standardized scaled scores and stratified discrete norms were also calculated. Group 2 performed worse than Group 1 on most tests (p-values < .001-.021). Education was associated with all test scores, age with most, and sex effects were consistent with the literature.

Conclusions: We provide a model for developing sound normative data for widely used neuropsychological tests among older adults, untainted by potential early, undiagnosed cognitive impairment, reporting regression-based, scaled, and discrete norms for use in clinical settings to identify cognitive decline in older adults. Additionally, our co-norming of a variety of tests may enable intra-individual comparisons for diagnostic purposes. The present work addresses the challenge of developing robust normative data for neuropsychological tests in older adults.

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为希腊老年人的神经心理评估开发可靠的标准数据。
目的:在神经退行性病变的早期阶段,老年人的标准数据可能会因为无意中纳入了未确诊的患者而受到影响。为了避免这一误区,我们对未患有 MCI/痴呆症的老年人群进行了为期 3 年的随访,并制定了相关标准:随机抽取了 1041 名社区居民(年龄≥ 65 岁),对他们进行了两次全面的神经学和神经心理学检查[平均间隔 = 3.1 (SD = 0.9) 年]:其中,492 名参与者(第 1 组;65-87 岁)在两次评估中均未患有痴呆症(CDR=0,MMSE ≥ 26);他们的基线数据被用于制定标准。第 2 组(n = 202)仅在基线时符合上述标准,但在随访时不符合。多元线性回归包括基于回归的常模公式的人口统计学预测因素,以及作为因变量的每个测试变量的原始测试分数。此外,还计算了标准化比例分数和分层离散常模。在大多数测试中,第 2 组的成绩都比第 1 组差(p 值 <.001-.021)。教育程度与所有测试得分相关,年龄与大多数测试得分相关,性别效应与文献报道一致:我们为在老年人中广泛使用的神经心理测试提供了一个健全的常模数据,这些数据未受潜在的早期、未诊断的认知功能障碍的影响,报告了基于回归、比例和离散的常模,可用于临床环境中识别老年人的认知功能下降。此外,我们对各种测试进行的共同定标可用于诊断目的的个体内部比较。目前的研究工作解决了为老年人神经心理测试开发稳健的常模数据这一难题。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
5.40
自引率
3.80%
发文量
185
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society is the official journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, an organization of over 4,500 international members from a variety of disciplines. The Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society welcomes original, creative, high quality research papers covering all areas of neuropsychology. The focus of articles may be primarily experimental, applied, or clinical. Contributions will broadly reflect the interest of all areas of neuropsychology, including but not limited to: development of cognitive processes, brain-behavior relationships, adult and pediatric neuropsychology, neurobehavioral syndromes (such as aphasia or apraxia), and the interfaces of neuropsychology with related areas such as behavioral neurology, neuropsychiatry, genetics, and cognitive neuroscience. Papers that utilize behavioral, neuroimaging, and electrophysiological measures are appropriate. To assure maximum flexibility and to promote diverse mechanisms of scholarly communication, the following formats are available in addition to a Regular Research Article: Brief Communication is a shorter research article; Rapid Communication is intended for "fast breaking" new work that does not yet justify a full length article and is placed on a fast review track; Case Report is a theoretically important and unique case study; Critical Review and Short Review are thoughtful considerations of topics of importance to neuropsychology and include meta-analyses; Dialogue provides a forum for publishing two distinct positions on controversial issues in a point-counterpoint format; Special Issue and Special Section consist of several articles linked thematically; Letter to the Editor responds to recent articles published in the Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society; and Book Review, which is considered but is no longer solicited.
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