Clinical Applicability and Cutoff Values for an Unstructured Neuropsychological Assessment Protocol for Older Adults with Low Formal Education

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Abstract

Background and Objectives:The neuropsychological exam plays a central role in the assessment of elderly patients with cognitive complaints. It is particularly relevant to differentiate patients with mild dementia from those subjects with mild cognitive impairment. Formal education is a critical factor in neuropsychological performance; however, there are few studies that evaluated the psychometric properties, especially criterion related validity, neuropsychological tests for patients with low formal education. The present study aims to investigate the validity of an unstructured neuropsychological assessment protocol for this population and develop cutoff values for clinical use.Methods and Results:A protocol composed by the Rey-Auditory Verbal Learning Test, Frontal Assessment Battery, Category and Letter Fluency, Stick Design Test, Clock Drawing Test, Digit Span, Token Test and TN-LIN was administered to 274 older adults (96 normal aging, 85 mild cognitive impairment and 93 mild Alzheimer's disease) with predominantly low formal education. Factor analysis showed a four factor structure related to Executive Functions, Language/Semantic Memory, Episodic Memory and Visuospatial Abilities, accounting for 65% of explained variance. Most of the tests showed a good sensitivity and specificity to differentiate the diagnostic groups. The neuropsychological protocol showed a significant ecological validity as 3 of the cognitive factors explained 31% of the variance on Instrumental Activities of Daily Living.Conclusion:The study presents evidence of the construct, criteria and ecological validity for this protocol. The neuropsychological tests and the proposed cutoff values might be used for the clinical assessment of older adults with low formal education. © 2013 de Paula et al.

Figures

  • Table 1. Participants description, neuropsychological assessment and group comparisons for the whole sample.
  • Table 2. Factor structure of the neuropsychological assessment protocol.
  • Figure 1. Stepwise linear regression model for the association between cognitive and functional measures. Legend: the four components extracted on the factor analysis (Episodic Memory, Executive Functions, Language/Semantic Memory and Visuospatial Abilities) were used as independent predictors of older adults performance on Activities of Daily Living. Three of the four components (excluding Visuospatial Abilities) explained about 30% of functional performance variance. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0073167.g001
  • Table 3. NA, MCI and AD non-depressed patients’ description and ROC Curve Analysis.
  • Figure 2. Stepwise multinomial regression models for the classification of the participants. Legend: increase on the classification rate of the participants by the use of different neuropsychological tests. The final model contains tests of general cognitive function (Mini-Mental State Examination), Episodic Memory (Delayed Recall and Recognition from the Rey Auditory-Verbal Learning Test), Executive Functions (Category Fluency Test ‘‘Animals’’ and the Frontal Assessment Battery) and Language/Semantic Memory (Laboratory of Neuropsychological Investigations Naming Test ‘‘Nouns’’). Considering its general accuracy the protocol improves the classification rate of the participant’s in 47%, starting at chance (33%). Its accuracy is greater for the identification of normal Aging (54%) followed by AD (47%) and MCI (42%), which reflect the intermediate condition of this last group. doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0073167.g002

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CITATION STYLE

APA

de Paula, J. J., Bertola, L., Ávila, R. T., Moreira, L., Coutinho, G., de Moraes, E. N., … Malloy-Diniz, L. F. (2013). Clinical Applicability and Cutoff Values for an Unstructured Neuropsychological Assessment Protocol for Older Adults with Low Formal Education. PLoS ONE, 8(9). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0073167

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