Comparison of cognitive and UHDRS measures in monitoring disease progression in Huntington's disease: A 12-month longitudinal study

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Abstract

Progressive cognitive decline is a feature of Huntington's disease (HD), an inherited neurodegenerative movement disorder. Comprehensive neuropsychological testing is the 'gold standard' to establish cognitive status but is often impractical in time-constrained clinics. The study evaluated the utility of brief cognitive tests (MMSE and MoCA), UHDRS measures and a comprehensive neuropsychological tests battery in monitoring short-term disease progression in HD. Twenty-two manifest HD patients and 22 matched controls were assessed at baseline and 12-month. A linear mixed-effect model showed that although the HD group had minimal change in overall global cognition after 12 months, they did show a significant decline relative to the control group. The controls exhibited a practice effect in most of the cognitive domain scores over time. Cognitive decline at 12-month in HD was found in the executive function domain but the effect of this on global cognitive score was masked by the improvement in their language domain score. The varying practice effects by cognitive domain with repeated testing indicates the importance of comparing HD patients to control group in research trials and that cognitive progression over 12 months in HD should not be judged by changes in global cognitive score. The three brief cognitive tests effectively described cognition of HD patients on cross-sectional analysis. The UHDRS cognitive component, which focuses on testing executive function and had low variance over time, is a more reliable brief substitute for comprehensive neuropsychological testing than MMSE and MoCA in monitoring cognitive changes in HD patients after 12 months. © 2014 Toh et al.; licensee BioMed Central Ltd.

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APA

Toh, E. A., MacAskill, M. R., Dalrymple-Alford, J. C., Myall, D. J., Livingston, L., Macleod, S. A. D., & Anderson, T. J. (2014). Comparison of cognitive and UHDRS measures in monitoring disease progression in Huntington’s disease: A 12-month longitudinal study. Translational Neurodegeneration, 3(1). https://doi.org/10.1186/2047-9158-3-15

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