26 results
88 Single Trial of Biber Figure Learning Test Captures Subjective Cognitive Decline
- Michael Kann, Peter Zeiger, Silvia Chapman, Shaina Shagalow, Jillian Joyce, Leah Waltrip, Sandra Rizer, Martina Azar, Stephanie Cosentino
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 390-391
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Objective:
The Biber Figure Learning Test (BFLT) is a serial figure learning assessment previously been shown to be sensitive to various biomarkers of the aging brain. BFLT is an extensive assessment requiring about 30 minutes for administration. In this study, we investigated BFLT’s associations with subjective cognitive decline (SCD), an early marker for preclinical Alzheimer’s Disease (AD), and examined whether alternative BFLT indices could be utilized to considerably shorten the length of assessment without decreasing its sensitivity to SCD.
Participants and Methods:Participants were 50 cognitively normal older adults (8% Hispanic, 92% Non-Hispanic; 78% White, 16% Black; 64% female; mean age =72.7 (SD =6.2); mean education =17.05 (SD =2.09)). SCD was measured using a 20-item age-anchored dichotomous questionnaire that assessed complaints of cognitive functioning, and the BFLT was administered in full. Pearson correlations were conducted between SCD and BFLT scores including: Trial 1 Learning (T1), Trials 1 to 2 Total Learning (T1T2), Trials 1 to 3 Total Learning (T1T3), Trials 1 to 5 Total Learning (Total Learning), Immediate Recall, Delayed Recall, Proactive Interference (Trial B – Trial 1), Retroactive Interference (Immediate Recall – Trial 5), and Total Discrimination (calculated as [Recognition Total Correct + 0.5]/16) − ([Total False Alarms + 0.5]/31]). A Fishers Exact Test was utilized to compare the correlational strength between SCD and each of the BFLT scores. Lastly, demographically adjusted (age, gender, and education) regression models were conducted to examine SCD as an individual predictor for the various BFLT scores.
Results:SCD was negatively associated with BFLT T1 (r =-0.406, p =0.003), T1T2 (r =-0.331, p =0.019), T1T3 (r =-0.323, p =0.022), Total Learning (r =-0.283, p =0.046), Immediate Recall (r =-0.322, p =0.023), Delayed Recall (r =-0.318, p =0.025), and Retroactive Interference (r =-0.388, p =0.005) and positively associated with Proactive Interference (r =0.308, p =0.029). There was no significant difference in correlational strength between any of these BFLT scores and SCD. Adjusting for demographics, SCD predicted Immediate Recall (B =-0.273, p =0.029), Total Learning (B =- 0.253, p =0.040), T1 (B =-0.412, p =0.002), T1T2 (B =-0.326, p =0.010), T1T3 (B =-0.299, p =0.017), Proactive Interference (B =0.292, p =0.050), and Retroactive Interference (B =- 0.330, p =0.025).
Conclusions:Eight of the nine assessed BFLT scores were strongly correlated with age-anchored SCD and age-anchored SCD predicted seven of the nine assessed BFLT indices when adjusted for demographics. Although additional work is needed, these findings suggest SCD’s sensitivity to changes in visuospatial learning and memory, supporting its use as an early marker for preclinical AD. Likewise, our results suggest that an abbreviated version of the BFLT could be utilized that shortens testing time and reduces participant fatigue without a decrease in clinical relevance. Through ongoing longitudinal work, we hope to further disentangle the relationship between SCD and visuospatial learning and memory as measured through the BFTL and to examine how associations between SCD and the BFLT assessment change over time.
69 Evaluation of Ethnoracial Differences in Self- and Study-Partner Reported Subjective Cognitive Decline
- Talia L Robinson, Hannah M Klinger, Rachel F Buckley, Kacie D Deters, Yakeel T Quiroz, Dorene M Rentz, Reisa A Sperling, Rebecca E Amariglio
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 374-375
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Objective:
1) Evaluate the association of self- and study-partner report of subjective cognitive decline (SCD) to objective cognitive performance across ethnoracial groups. 2) Evaluate the concordance of self- and study partner report of SCD across ethnoracial groups.
Participants and Methods:Participants were 5241 non-Hispanic White (NHW), 267 non-Hispanic Black (NHB), 225 Hispanic, and 228 Asian participants screened for the A4 study (N=5961). Participants completed the Preclinical Alzheimer Cognitive Composite (PACC), and self- and study partner-report of SCD using the Cognitive Function Index (CFI). Analysis of variance was used to assess difference in key variables by ethnoracial group. Regression analyses were conducted to evaluate the association of SCD and objective performance by ethnoracial group, and the association between self-and study partner report of SCD by ethnoracial group.
Results:Asian participants reported the highest mean CFI relative to all other groups, while NHW reported the lowest (F(3,5957)=41.93, p <.001). Asian and NHW participants had higher PACC scores relative to NHB and Hispanic participants (F(3,5957)=41.93, p <.001). Regression analyses revealed higher CFI was associated with lower PACC score across groups, and this association was strongest in the Asian sample relative to other groups (F(10, 5897)=40.49, p<.001,R2=.06). Evaluation of study partner characteristics suggested NBH participants had the highest proportion on non-spousal study partners relative to other groups. Regression analyses revealed no differences in the association of self- and study partner report of SCD across ethnoracial groups (F(10, 5859)=132.9, p<.001, R2=0.18).
Conclusions:Results suggest that that SCD is associated with objective cognitive performance across racial groups, although the strength of this association appears to vary in this sample. There is also consistent concordance between self- and study partner report of SCD across groups, despite differences in study partner relationships. SCD may be considered a valid predictor of subtle cognitive change across groups in the A4 sample. Limitations include small group sizes relative to the large NHW sample. Future work with larger, more representative samples are needed to further validate these findings.
18 Which cognitive complaints among older adults are more concerning than others? Analysis of items in a Subjective Cognitive Decline Questionnaire
- Michelle Hernandez, Jillian Joyce, Silvia Chapman, Martina Azar, Leah Waltrip, Peter Zeiger, Shaina Shagalow, Sandra Rizer, Michael Kann, Stella Garriga, Stephanie Cosentino
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 809-810
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Objective:
Subjective Cognitive Decline (SCD) is the self-reported experience of one’s own declining cognition prior to objective impairment on clinical neuropsychological testing. While SCD is a promising marker of preclinical Alzheimer’s disease (AD), information is needed to determine which cognitive complaints reflect typical aging versus prodromal degenerative disease. The objective of the current study was to examine the extent to which specific cognitive complaints were associated with two clinical outcomes including: 1) lower performance on cognitive tasks sensitive to preclinical AD; and 2) seeking help (i.e., medical attention) for cognitive difficulties.
Participants and Methods:The current sample consisted of 175 healthy older adults (56 Male, 119 Female), aged 51 to 90 (M=72.67, SD=7.12) with a mean education of 16 years (SD=2.3 years) who performed > -1.5 SD on clinical neuropsychological testing. 26.8% of the sample self-reported as race/ethnic minorities (e.g., Hispanic or Non-Hispanic, Black, Asian, Other.) Participants completed a 20-item SCD questionnaire assessing perceived cognitive difficulties in comparison to same aged peers, and tests shown to be sensitive to preclinical AD including the Face Name Associative Learning Test and the Loewenstein-Acevedo Scales for Semantic Interference and Learning. Participants were coded as having sought help for SCD (39%) if they entered the current study from a clinical referral source, OR if they entered through a non-clinical referral stream but indicated that they had previously seen a doctor specifically for memory concerns or spoken to their doctor about memory concerns. Chi square tests were used to examine relationships between SCD item endorsement and help-seeking; ANOVAs were used to the extent to which item endorsement was associated with performance on cognitive tests. Results were considered significant at p < .05.
Results:Three SCD items were associated with both lower cognitive test scores and having sought help for SCD (p values ranged from < .001 to .02). Items included difficulty remembering the date or day of the week and remembering a few shopping items without a list. One non-memory item was also associated with both outcomes including difficulty thinking ahead. In contrast, six items were not related to either outcome of interest. Such items included difficulty remembering appointments, remembering where you put things like keys, following a map to a new location, doing two things at once, understanding what you read, or understanding what people say to you. The remaining eleven items explore the extent to which selective associations exist with either help-seeking or cognitive performance.
Conclusions:Patients and clinicians alike are often unsure about which cognitive difficulties are typical for aging and which may be the cause for further workup. Current results suggest that certain complaints among cognitively healthy older adults may be cause for more thorough evaluation or monitoring. These complaints include specific memory and nonmemory concerns. Future work is needed to determine if these complaints predict future cognitive decline or conversion to Mild Cognitive Impairment.
79 Brief Subjective Memory Screener Predicts Memory Dysfunction
- Jillian L Joyce, Sandra Rizer, Shaina Shagalow, Leah Waltrip, Silvia Chapman, Stephanie Cosentino
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 382-383
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Objective:
Alzheimer’s disease (AD) is expected to affect over 7 million older Americans by 2025. Development of fast and inexpensive screening measures for routine screening is critical for identifying those suffering from the earliest stages of AD including Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) and Subjective Cognitive Decline (SCD). Here we assess the validity and utility of a brief, 5-item SCD screener and its associations with neuropsychological performance as compared to an existing objective cognitive screener, the Mini Mental Status Exam (MMSE).
Participants and Methods:Development: A brief, 5-item SCD questionnaire was developed based on a more extensive 20-item version previously validated (Chapman et al. 2021). Participants: 27 cognitively diverse (MCI and cognitively normal) community dwelling older adults were recruited for this study. Mean age: 71.9 ± 7. Inclusion criteria include memory concerns. Exclusion criteria include no previous diagnoses of neurodegenerative diseases and/or major stroke. Administration: Participants completed a brief, 5-item SCD screener along with cognitive testing including the MMSE and a clinically validated list-learning test, the Selective Reminding Test (SRT). Statistical Methods: Spearman 2-tailed correlations were conducted to assess the relationship between the two screening measures, and their relationships to the SRT. Outcome measures on the SRT included total recall (max: 72) and delayed recall (max: 12). All cognitive measures were demographically adjusted with normative data.
Results:The mean total for the SCD screener was 2.1 ±1.1, and the mean MMSE score was 29.2 ± 1.2. The SCD screener was associated with MMSE scores (r= -.39, p= .043), SRT Total Recall (r= -.43, p= .024) and Delayed Recall (r=-.42, p=.031) measures. MMSE scores did not associate with either SRT outcome (p>.05).
Conclusions:Results support the utility and validity of a brief subjective cognitive decline screener for identifying those who may be experiencing memory dysfunction. The brief SCD screener outperformed the MMSE, an existing and widely used objective screening measure. Associations between the SCD screener and SRT outcomes support the validity and utility of the brief screener and recapitulate previous findings with the more extensive version of the SCD questionnaire (Chapman et al. 2021). Ongoing research is focusing on the utility of the screener in frontline clinical settings and translation of the screener into Spanish.
84 Utilizing the DSM-5 Cross Cutting Measure to Characterize the Neuropsychiatric Correlates of Subjective and Objective Cognition
- Leah Waltrip, Jillian L Joyce, Silvia Chapman, Sandra Rizer, Shaina Shagalow, Yedili Genao Perez, Edward D Huey, Stephanie Cosentino
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 387-388
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Objective:
Historically, psychiatric conditions and neurodegenerative diseases have been considered differential diagnoses in older adults with cognitive impairment. However, recent evidence has shown that neuropsychiatric symptoms may be prodromal for neurodegenerative disease. Subjective Cognitive Decline (SCD) is a potential marker for pre-clinical Alzheimer’s Disease (AD) that is frequently related to mood disturbances. Delineating the relationship between neuropsychiatric symptoms, SCD, and cognitive impairment will help to define both the independent and combined utility of SCD and neuropsychiatric symptoms as markers of preclinical AD. This abstract uses the DSM-5 Cross-Cutting Measure (DSM-5 CC), a novel comprehensive screening tool for psychiatric symptoms, to examine the relationship between objective and subjective measures of cognition as they relate to neuropsychiatric symptoms.
Participants and Methods:27 community dwelling, cognitively diverse older adults (78% female, mean age 71.9 ± 7) were enrolled in the Concerns about Memory Problems (CAMP) study. Inclusion criteria included the expressed concern about memory functioning by participants on a 5-item screener, while exclusion criteria were defined as previous diagnosis of neurodegenerative diseases and/or major stroke. All participants completed neuropsychological testing and study surveys including the DSM-5 CC. Participants completed Level 1 and all Level 2 (L2) forms of the DSM-5 CC. Spearman two-tailed non-parametric correlations and independent samples t-tests were conducted to examine the relationship between the DSM-5 CC and the 5-item subjective cognition screener, as well as the DSM-5 CC and objective cognition results.
Results:Subjective measures of cognition, as measured by answers to the 5-item screening measure, were significantly associated with DSM-5 CC measures. Question 1 on the SCD screener which asks, “Compared to others your age, do you have difficulty with memory or thinking abilities?” was associated with anger (p=.033) and depression (p=.018) L2 forms. Question 3, “Do any difficulties with memory or thinking abilities make it difficult for you to do things in daily life?)” was associated with the L2 forms for somatic symptoms (p=.016) and repetitive thoughts and behaviors (p<.001). Objective measures of cognition from neuropsychological testing also correlated with DSM-5 CC sub-scores. Digits Backwards Length (DBL) correlated with DSM-5 CC Level 1 Sum (r= -.57, p=.002). DBL (r=-.59 p=.001) and Digits Backwards Total Correct (DBTC) (r=-.47, p=.013) associated with somatic symptoms L2 and sleep L2 (DBL: r=,-.45 p=.019; DBTC: r=-.39, p=.044). Category Naming (animals) was also associated with anxiety L2 (r=-.42, p=.030).
Conclusions:Subjective and objective measures of cognition were each related to sub-scores of the DSM-5 CC. Interestingly, the associations were largely non-overlapping. These results highlight the importance of considering a wide range of neuropsychiatric symptoms in the assessment of SCD and cognitive impairment. Findings contribute to the growing body of literature suggesting that neuropsychiatric symptoms should be studied in conjunction with cognitive symptoms among older adults as co-occurring phenomena. Future directions will need to include longitudinal studies that can examine the prodromal nature of SCD and neuropsychiatric symptoms for Alzheimer’s and other neurodegenerative disorders.
66 An Exploratory Analysis of the Moderating Effect of Internalizing Symptoms on Memory Performance Following COVID-19 Infection.
- Samantha J Feldman, Katie C Benitah, Theone SE Paterson, Kristina M Gicas
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 61-62
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Objective:
Cognitive difficulties are amongst the most frequently reported sequelae following COVID-19 infection, even in those experiencing mild to moderate illness (Matos et al., 2021). Recent research has identified patterns of diminished cognitive performance on tests of memory and executive functioning in COVID-19 cases; however, the etiology of neurocognitive difficulties remains unclear (Delgado-Alonso et al., 2022). Emerging evidence has identified moderate associations between decreased performance on neuropsychological tests of memory and elevated anxiety and depression symptom reporting in COVID-19 patients. Similar associations are well-established in the literature in persons with anxiety and depression disorders, warranting further investigation as to whether mental health variables such as internalizing symptom severity may moderate the association between COVID-19 illness and cognitive difficulties. This study examined how internalizing symptoms as indexed by depression and anxiety symptom scales may differentially influence performance on neuropsychological tests of memory between persons who have and have not had COVID-19.
Participants and Methods:In this cross-sectional study, 104 adults aged 19-80, were recruited in Ontario and British Columbia, Canada; 84 adults met inclusion criteria and participated in neuropsychological testing. There were 40 participants who tested positive for COVID-19 infection (N=44 with no suspected exposures or confirmed diagnosis of COVID-19). Participants had no history of dementia, mild cognitive impairment, or other known neurological disorder. Anxiety and depression symptoms were measured using the Generalized Anxiety Disorder-7 (GAD-7) and Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) via self-report on Qualtrics. Memory encoding and delayed recognition performance were assessed using the Hopkins Verbal Learning Test Revised (HVLT-R) and the Neuropsychological Assessment Battery Shape Learning subtest (NAB-SL). To test for potential moderating effects of anxiety and depression symptoms on the association between COVID-19 infection status and memory performance, a series of multiple linear regressions were conducted. Age and sex were included as covariates in all analyses.
Results:Moderation analyses revealed that the interaction between COVID-19 infection and anxiety symptoms accounted for a significant portion of variance in both HVLT-R recognition (B= -0.78, SE= 0.34, p<0.05) and NAB-SL delayed recognition scores (B= -0.83, SE= 0.35, p<0.05). Simple slopes analyses revealed that among participants who tested positive for COVID-19 infection, higher GAD-7 scores were associated with lower verbal and visual recognition scores. A similar interaction was observed between COVID-19 and depressive symptoms in accounting for variance in NAB-SL delayed recognition scores, however, for that model the threshold of p=0.05 was not met in our small sample (p=0.07).
Conclusions:Findings demonstrate that anxiety symptom severity had a moderating effect on the impact of COVID-19 on delayed retrieval of verbal and visual information from memory. Future work in a larger sample is needed to further elucidate the potential moderating role of depression on memory in COVID-19 positive persons, as the current work suggests that depression symptoms could have a similar impact as anxiety. Further identifying the relationships between key modifiable psychological factors such as anxiety and memory following COVID-19 infection will provide insight into potential interventions to minimize the negative effects of internalizing symptoms on long-term cognitive outcomes.
93 Impact of Childhood Socioeconomic Status on Subjective Cognitive Decline
- Stella M Garriga, Jillian Joyce, Martina Azar, Leah Waltrip, Peter Zeiger, Shaina Shagalow, Sandra Rizer, Michael Kann, Michelle Hernandez, Stephanie Cosentino
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, p. 394
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Objective:
Subjective cognitive decline (SCD) is increasingly being considered one of the earliest clinical signs of Alzheimer’s Disease (AD). Certain characteristics of early life, such as childhood socioeconomic status (SES), have been associated with late life cognitive performance. Here we examine the extent to which childhood SES predicts SCD.
Participants and Methods:The current sample consisted of 55 healthy older adults (17 Male, 39 Female), aged 51 to 88 (M=73.14, SD=6.23) with a mean education of 16 years (SD=2.1 years). 21.5% of the sample self-reported as race/ethnic minorities (e.g., Hispanic or Non-Hispanic African American, Asian, Other.) Participants completed a 20-item SCD questionnaire assessing perceived cognitive difficulties in comparison to same aged peers, and objective cognitive testing. Childhood SES was assessed using two items. The first item asked the participant to utilize a modified MacArthur Scale of Subjective Social Status to identify where on the ladder they felt their family would have been placed during their childhood relative to others in the United States. This ladder has 10 rungs, with rung 1 associated with being the “worst off” and rung 10 associated with being the “best off”. The second item asked the participant to rate their family’s difficulty paying bills during their childhood. Linear regression models were used to examine the extent to which childhood SES predicted SCD. Models were adjusted for education, referral source (clinical versus non-clinical), and objective cognitive testing. Age and gender were not associated with childhood SES or SCD, and as a result were not adjusted for in these models.
Results:On the MacArthur Scale, 20% of participants placed their family at rung 5, 38.2% placed their families at a rung lower than 5, and 41.8% placed their family at a rung higher than 5. When rating the difficulty their family faced paying bills, 3.6% of participants responded “extremely difficult”, 16.4% responded “very difficult”, 20% responded “somewhat difficult”, 23.6% responded “slightly difficult”, and 36.4% responded “not difficult”. Linear regression models revealed a significant effect of childhood SES on SCD (β=-.29, p=.045, SE=.90; β=-.35, p=.015, SE=1.68).
Conclusions:Childhood SES, measured by subjective social status and family’s difficulty paying the bills in childhood, was predictive of SCD in this study of cognitively healthy adults. This result highlights another characteristic of early life that may shape the path of cognitive aging. The predictive utility of childhood SES for SCD may also provide clinicians and researchers with further insight into the populations that may be more susceptible to experiencing SCD in later life. Future studies should utilize a larger sample size among a population with a greater range of childhood SES, to most accurately capture the effectiveness of childhood SES to predict SCD.
87 Not Normal but not MCI: Course of Memory over time
- Michael Conley, Jeff Schaffert, Anthony Longoria, Jessica Helphrey, C Munro Cullum, Laura Lacritz
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 389-390
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Objective:
A diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) requires memory complaint and objective memory impairment. However, some individuals report subjective memory complaints (SMC) despite having intact memory performance, while others demonstrate subtle impairment on memory testing but have no memory complaints; neither case would meet criteria for MCI. This study aimed to compare memory performances over time in individuals who do not meet traditional MCI criteria to those with normal cognition and those who converted to MCI.
Participants and Methods:Diagnoses for a longitudinal sample from the Texas Alzheimer’s Research and Care Consortium were reviewed by a consensus panel of neuropsychologists and neurologists and reclassified at time of last visit. Diagnostic categories included SMC (i.e., memory complaint but no impairment on testing), objective cognitive impairment but no complaint (Impaired but not MCI), normal control (NC), MCI, and dementia. In this study, 827 participants were divided into 4 groups: 1) NC over 5 visits (n=511, 71% female; 42% Latinx/Hispanic), 2) baseline NC to amnestic MCI (n=62; 63% female; 57% Latinx/Hispanic), 3) SMC at last visit (n=133; 58% female; 70% Latinx/Hispanic), and 4) impaired but not MCI at last visit (n=121; 71% female; 60% Latinx/Hispanic). A memory composite (z-score) was created from the CERAD list-learning task (immediate, delayed, and recognition-discrimination) and Wechsler Memory Scale (Immediate and Delayed Logical Memory and Visual Reproduction) to evaluate memory performance over time. A linear mixed-model adjusting for age, education, sex, ethnicity, and number of APOE e4 alleles evaluated memory performance across 5 visits for the groups. To assess if depression followed a similar course, a linear mixed-model evaluated Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS) scores over time.
Results:At baseline, groups differed by age (F=22.82; p<.001), education (F=8.60; p<.001), MMSE scores (F=9.38; p<.001), GDS-30 scores (F=3.56; p=.015), and memory composites (F=24.29; p<.001). A significant group X time interaction was observed (F=4.83, p<.001). Memory performance improved in both the SMC and the NC groups, remained stable in the impaired but not MCI group, and declined (as expected) in those who converted to amnestic MCI. Depression scores also showed a significant group X time interaction (F=2.43; p=.004), in which the NC to MCI group endorsed slightly more depression symptoms over time, while other groups declined or remained stable.
Conclusions:Memory trajectories in this diverse sample differed across groups. Individuals with SMC but without objective memory impairment and normal controls showed some improvement in memory over time, presumably due to practice effects. Those with subtle memory impairments but no complaint (i.e., did not meet MCI criteria) remained stable and those who converted to amnestic MCI had worse memory across time. The stability of memory performances in the impaired not MCI group suggests these subtle memory inefficiencies may be longstanding or unperceived. However, because our sample achieved retrospective diagnoses of SMC and impaired not MCI, it will be important for future studies to prospectively follow these groups to determine which risk factors may predict progression to MCI and what impact ethnicity may have on these trajectories.
5 The impact of recreational cannabis use on neuropsychological function in epilepsy
- Lucy Roberts-West, Sallie Baxendale
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 311-312
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Objective:
Cannabis is classified as a class B drug in the UK with penalties for possession of up to 5 years in prison, an unlimited fine or both. Nevertheless it is widely available and is the most commonly used drug in the UK with approximately 2.6 million (7.6%) of adults reporting that they sometimes or regularly use it. It is not uncommon for people who present in our epilepsy clinic to report regular use of cannabis; some use it recreationally whilst others report ‘self-medicating’ based on the belief that it has a beneficial impact on their seizures. The aim of this study was to establish the prevalence of cannabis use in people with epilepsy referred for a neuropsychological assessment and to examine the impact of cannabis use on cognitive function in this group.
Participants and Methods:All patients who attend for a neuropsychological assessment are routinely asked about illegal drug use in their clinical interview. This information is also captured in the medical and neuropsychiatric assessments they undergo when assessed by the multidisciplinary team. The electronic medical records of 800 consecutive patients who had undergone a neuropsychological assessment between 2019 and 2022 were searched for references to cannabis use. The neuropsychological profiles of patients reporting cannabis use were compared to those seen in the larger series across multiple cognitive domains.
Results:Seventy (8.75%) of the patients in the series reported past or present cannabis use. Cannabis users were more likely to be male (p<0.01) and were younger (p<0.01) than those who did not report use. Reading IQ was significantly lower in the cannabis group (p<0.001). Patients who were regularly using cannabis at the time of the neuropsychological assessment did not differ from the rest of the cohort on tests of processing speed, working memory, naming or verbal fluency. There were no differences between the groups in their performance on an embedded measure of performance validity. However the patients who were regularly using cannabis at the time of their neuropsychological assessments scored significantly lower on tests of verbal learning (p<0.05) and reported significantly greater subjective memory problems in everyday life (p=0.02) than the non-cannabis group. The group using cannabis also scored significantly more highly on the depression (p<0.01) and anxiety scales (p=0.02) on the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale.
Conclusions:The prevalence and patterns of cannabis use in the epilepsy population mirror those seen in the wider population. The impact on regular cannabis use on neuropsychological function appears to be most evident on measures of new learning and subjective measures of memory disturbance. Cannabis use is significantly associated with lower levels of cognitive reserve and elevated levels of anxiety and low mood. Whilst caution must be employed with respect to any direct attribution in these complex clinical presentations, these findings may be helpful in the interpretation of neuropsychological test scores and the planning of interventions, particularly with respect to subjective memory complaints in this group.
59 The Impact of Anxiety on Memory Performance in Older Adults with Depression
- Usha D. Persaud, Kevin J. Manning, Rong Wu, David C. Steffens
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 844-845
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Objective:
Late life depression (LLD) refers to a diagnosis of major depressive disorder in people older than 60, and has been linked to significant cognitive impairment and increased risk of Alzheimer's disease. Although anxiety and depression are highly comorbid, the impact of anxiety on cognition in LLD is far less researched. This is important given that over 20% of middle aged and older adults endorse clinically significant chronic worry. Generalized anxiety disorder in older adults with major depression is associated with poorer cognition and worse treatment outcomes compared with those without anxiety. Therefore, the purpose of the study is to examine the role of anxiety on memory in LLD. We hypothesized that presence of anxiety among older depressed adults would be associated with worse cognitive performance over time.
Participants and Methods:Participants included 124 individuals (69.4% female, 90.3% Caucasian) aged 60 or above (M = 71.5, SD = 7.4) who met criteria for major depression, single episode or recurrent. They completed the State Trait Anxiety Inventory, Montgomery Asberg Depression Rating Scale, and a measure of verbal episodic memory (WMS-IV Logical Memory) as part of a larger neuropsychological battery. Data were collected from baseline to three years as part of a larger NIMH-supported longitudinal study. Two-level linear mixed-effect models were fitted to predict memory. State and trait anxiety were used as time-varying predictors. The between-person (level 2) and within-person (level 1) effects of anxiety on memory were assessed controlling for the time trend, age, education, gender, race, and change in depression over time.
Results:Plot trajectories across variables revealed a negative correlation such that as anxiety decreased, memory improved over time. Hierarchical linear mixed-effect models revealed that average state anxiety was a marginally significant between-person (level2) predictor for memory [B=-0.041, t(128)=-1.8, p=0.083]. Individuals with greater average state anxiety were more likely to experience memory decline compared to those with lower average state anxiety. In addition, the within-person effect (level 1) of state anxiety was significant [B=-0.096, t(253)=-2.7, p=0.007]. As an individual's anxiety increased over time, their memory declined. Trait anxiety showed a significant within-person effect on memory [B=-0.087, t(254)=-2.0, p=0.048], but a non-significant between-person effect [B=-0.005, t(124)=-0.06, p=0.95].
Conclusions:Anxiety appears to increase the risk of memory decline in older adults with major depression, a cohort who are already at risk of cognitive decline. Changes in anxiety increased risk of memory decline even when accounting for changes in depression over time. Although the causal link between anxiety and cognitive impairment remains unclear, it is possible that anxiety and worry may compete for cognitive resources necessary for demanding tasks and situations, detracting from abilities, such as attention and working memory. Older adults with depression may also have difficulty coping adaptively with anxiety, which may negatively affect cognition. Finally, presence of anxiety may represent a form of mild behavioral impairment, a prodrome of cognitive decline leading to dementia. Overall, the present study highlights the negative impact of anxiety on memory performance, indicating that treatment interventions targeting anxiety in older adults are essential to help prevent cognitive decline.
59 Objectively-Measured Performance on Tests of Episodic Memory and Executive Function in Autopsy-Confirmed Chronic Traumatic Encephalopathy
- Madeline Uretsky, Evan Nair, Nicole Saltiel, Bobak Abdolmohammadi, Sydney Mosaheb, Julia Culhane, Brett Martin, Joseph Palmisano, Yorghos Tripodis, Robert Stern, Victor Alvarez, Bertrand Russell Huber, Thor Stein, Ann McKee, Jesse Mez, Michael Alosco
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 264-265
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Objective:
Chronic traumatic encephalopathy (CTE) is a neurodegenerative disease that can only be diagnosed at post-mortem. Revised criteria for the clinical syndrome of CTE, known as traumatic encephalopathy syndrome (TES), include impairments in episodic memory and/or executive function as core clinical features. These criteria were informed by retrospective interviews with next-of-kin and the presence and rates of objective impairments in memory and executive functions in CTE are unknown. Here, we characterized antemortem neuropsychological test performance in episodic memory and executive functions among deceased contact sport athletes neuropathologically diagnosed with CTE.
Participants and Methods:The sample included 80 deceased male contact sport athletes from the UNITE brain bank who had autopsy-confirmed CTE (and no other neurodegenerative diseases). Published criteria were used for the autopsy diagnosis of CTE. Neuropsychological test reports (raw scores) were acquired through medical record requests. Raw scores were converted to z-scores using the same age, sex, and education-adjusted normative data. Tests of memory included long delay trials from the Rey Complex Figure, CVLT-II, HVLT-R, RBANS, and BVMT-R. Tests of executive functions included Trail Making Test-B (TMT-B), Controlled Oral Word Association Test, WAIS-III Picture Arrangement, and various WAIS-IV subtests. Not all brain donors had the same tests, and the sample sizes vary across tests, with 33 donors having tests from both domains. Twenty-eight had 1 test in memory and 3 had 2+. Eight had 1 test of executive function and 46 had 2+. A z-score of 1.5 standard deviations below the normative mean was impaired. Interpretation of test performance followed the American Academy of Clinical Neuropsychology guidelines (Guilmette et al., 2020). Bivariate correlations assessed cumulative p-tau burden (summary semiquantitative ratings of p-tau severity across 11 brain regions) and TMT-B (n=34) and CVLT-II (n=14), the most common tests available.
Results:Of the 80 (mean age= 59.9, SD=18.0 years; 13, 16.3% were Black), 72 played football, 4 played ice hockey, and 4 played other contact sports. Most played at the professional level (57, 71.3%). Mean time between neuropsychological testing and death was 3.9 (SD= 4.5) years. The most common reason for testing was dementia-related (43, 53.8%). Mean z-scores fell in the average psychometric range(mean z= -0.52, SD=1.5, range= -6.0 to 3.0) for executive function and the low average range for memory (mean z= -1.3, SD=1.1, range= -4.0 to 2.0). Eleven (20.4%) had impairment on 1 test and 3 (5.6%) on 2+ tests of executive functions. The most common impairment was on TMT-B (mean z= -1.77, 13 [38.2%] impaired). For memory, 13 (41.9%) had impairment on 1 test. Of the 14 who had CVLT-II, 7 were impaired (mean z= -1.33). Greater p-tau burden was associated with worse performance on CVLT-II (r= -.653, p= .02), but not TMT-B (r= .187, p>.05).
Conclusions:This study provides the first evidence for objectively-measured impairments in executive functions and memory in a sample with known, autopsy-confirmed CTE. Furthermore, p-tau burden corresponded to worse memory test performance. Examination of neuropsychological tests from medical records has limitations but can overcome shortcomings of retrospective informant reports to provide insight into the cognitive profiles associated with CTE.
12 Examining Illness Perception Among Cognitively Healthy Older Adults
- Elizabeth Soto, Martina Azar, Jillian Joyce, Silvia Chapman, Leah Waltrip, Peter Zeiger, Shaina Shagalow, Sandra Rizer, Michael Kann, Stephanie Cosentino
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 804-805
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Objective:
An individual with dementia suffers from cognitive decline affecting not only memory but at least one of the other domains, such as personality, praxis, abstract thought, language, executive functioning, attention, and social skills. Further, the severity of the decline must be significant enough to interfere with daily functions. It is currently unknown whether any of the causes of dementia can be cured. Many challenges confront patients and their families, including a lack of knowledge about dementia and associated treatments; therefore, it is essential to study illness perception regarding dementia-related symptoms in order to improve psychoeducation and lower barriers to seeking assistance. How individuals perceive and make sense of early dementia symptoms can significantly impact their help-seeking behaviors (HS). Exploring illness-perception regarding dementia-related symptoms may contribute to the development of strategies for increasing HS, early diagnosis, and intervention. The objective of this study is to describe aspects of illness perception in cognitively healthy older adults and examine potential correlations with demographic variables, including age, gender, and education.
Participants and Methods:The cohort comprised 55 cognitively healthy older adults enrolled in a study examining Subjective Cognitive Decline. All participants performed > -1.5 SD on clinical neuropsychological testing. Participants were 70% female and 30% male; and self-identified as White = 78%, Black = 16%, Asian = 2%, Other = 4% and Non-Hispanic = 98%. Participants read a short vignette describing a person experiencing significant memory issues representative of an individual with mild dementia and answered seven follow-up questions regarding the cause of memory problems, the likely course of memory problems, and potential treatments for memory problems. Chi-square analyses examined the endorsement of items in relation to age, gender, and education.
Results:When asked about the likely cause of memory problems, 65% of participants endorsed neurologic disease, 53% of participants endorsed normal aging, 26% endorsed stress, 25% endorsed genes, 4% endorsed fate/luck, and 16% endorsed "Don't know" for likely cause of symptoms. 64% of participants responded "will get worse", 18% "will go up and down", 16% "Don't know", and 2% "Other" in response to the progression of memory problems over time. For "Can he do anything to help [memory problems]?", only 2% responded "No" while 76% responded "Yes" and 22% endorsed "Don't know". On a follow-up question regarding ways an individual could improve his cognitive difficulties, 78% "Social Engagement", 73% "Exercise", 64% endorsed "Medication", 48% "Diet", 42% Psychological Treatment", 29% "Rehabilitation", 9%" Don't know" and 15% "Other." Lastly, 58% of participants reported "Independence", 33% "Identity," 4% "Friends," 4% "Respect," and 1% "Don't know" for things he may risk losing due to memory problems. Age, gender, and education were not associated with any of the above responses (p > .05).
Conclusions:Older adults demonstrate a range of ideas about the cause, course, and potential treatment for memory disorders. Understanding how and what factors impact illness perception is a pivotal step in improving illness perception and ultimately narrowing the gap in health disparities and HS. Further work in a large demographically representative sample is needed on illness perception and how socioeconomic factors, ethnicity, and other mediators interact with its impact on HS for dementia-related symptoms.
86 Memory Performance in Children with Duchenne and Becker Muscular Dystrophy
- Sydney E Park, Ronnise Owens, Jacqueline Kiefel, Sumit Verma
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, p. 78
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Objective:
There is limited and mixed research describing the memory performance of boys with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), a progressive disorder that affects the muscle and the brain, presumably due to the absence of dystrophin; however, the literature indicates either the existence of a selective deficit in verbal working memory, or more generalized impairment in both verbal and visual memory. Far less is documented about the neurocognitive profile of boys with Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD), a closely related neuromuscular disorder which allows for at least some functional dystrophin protein to circulate. The Child and Adolescent Memory Profile (ChAMP) is a valid and widely used memory battery that has not been studied in either DMD or BMD. This study aimed to assess the verbal and visual memory performance in boys having either a DMD or a BMD diagnosis using the ChAMP. A working memory measure, the Digit Span subtest from the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Fifth Edition, was also included for comparison.
Participants and Methods:Twenty-one patients (Age M = 12.19 ± 3.60; 100% male; 76% DMD, 24% Becker) were selected from retrospective data collection of neuropsychological performance in children with neuromuscular disorders. Patients were recruited and assessed as part of a larger scale IRB-approved research study designed to better understand the neurocognitive and behavioral trajectories of boys with DMD or BMD with a complete neuropsychological battery.
Results:Independent samples f-tests revealed no significant differences between groups across verbal (DMD M = 88.71; BMD M = 100.80; p = .08), visual (DMD M =90.36; BMD M 93.60; p = .33), and working memory (DMD M = 84.69; BMD: M 82.60; p = .40) domains. In additional analyses, a one sample f-test comparing verbal and visual memory within DMD children revealed significantly worse verbal than visual memory scores (verbal memory M = 88.71; visual memory M = 90.36; p = <.001).
Conclusions:There were no significant differences between groups in verbal, visual, and working memory performance, though sample size was a significant limitation. However, based on a comparison of means, children with BMD appear to have stronger verbal memory skills than children with DMD. Furthermore, significant differences between verbal and visual memory within DMD children were observed, such that verbal memory skills were weaker. These findings add to the absence of literature on verbal and visual memory outcomes in children with DMD and BMD.
34 Verbal Memory as a Language Function: Phonological Processing Contributes to Word List Recall in Persons with Multiple Sclerosis
- Emily Dvorak, James F. Sumowski
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 549-550
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Objective:
Verbal memory deficits are present in multiple sclerosis (MS), but neither inflammatory T2 lesion volume nor cerebral atrophy (generalized or localized hippocampal atrophy) fully explain disease-related verbal memory changes. Importantly, the hippocampus does not function in a vacuum; memory encoding and retrieval requires interactions between the hippocampus and cortical areas where information is processed and represented. Indeed, we have previously shown that lexical access speed (a language function assessed by rapid automatized naming) independently predicted delayed recall of verbal information (word list) for persons with MS, even when controlling for total learning. Informed by this work and recent ultra high field (7.0 Tesla) MRI research reporting high cortical lesion count in regions associated with phonological processing (e.g., plenum temporale, superior temporal gyrus), we assessed whether phonological processing independently explains verbal memory deficits in persons with MS.
Participants and Methods:Analyses were performed on a clinical sample of persons withMS aged 18 to 59 years (n=60: 49 relapsing, 11 progressive). Word-list memory was assessed by the Hopkins Verbal Learning Test, Revised (HVLT-R), which yielded scores for Total Learning (TL) and Delayed Recall (DR). Phonological processing was assessed with WIAT-4 Phonemic Proficiency. WIAT-4 Sentence Repetition was utilized as a non-phonological language control task, and WIAT-4 Word Reading was administered to control for premorbid verbal ability. CANTAB Paired Associate Learning served as a nonverbal memory comparison. Performance on tasks was standardized using published age-adjusted norms. Primary analyses used partial correlations to assess relationships between Phonemic Proficiency and (a) HVLT-R TL and DR controlling for WIAT-4 Word Reading, and (b) HVLT-R DR controlling for WIAT-4 Word Reading and HVLT-R TL. To assess specificity to phonological processing, the same partial correlations assessed relationships between Sentence Repetition and HVLT-R variables, and between Phonemic Proficiency and nonverbal memory (CANTAB PAL).
Results:When controlling for premorbid verbal ability, Phonemic Proficiency performance accounted for 7.8% of the variance in HVLT-R TL (rpartial=0.28, p=0.031) and 16% of the variance in HVLT-R DR (rpartial=0.40, p=0.002). Moreover, when additionally controlling for HVLT-R TL, Phonemic Proficiency still accounted for 10% of the variance in HVLT-R DR (r partial— 0.32, p=0.016). Showing specificity to phonological processing ability, performance on Sentence Repetition was not significantly related to HVLT-R DR when controlling for premorbid verbal ability (WIAT-4 Word Reading) and HVLT-R TL (rpartial=0.09, p=0.510). Showing specificity to verbal memory, neither Phonemic Proficiency nor Sentence Repetition performance were reliably related to CANTAB PAL for any variance in performance in nonverbal memory (Ps>0.9).
Conclusions:Results suggest that language ability, specifically phonological processing, contributes to delayed recall of word lists independent of premorbid verbal ability and initial total learning scores in persons with MS. These findings demonstrate contributions of language ability to verbal memory and highlight the need for further research into language ability changes in persons with MS. This may have implications for verbal memory rehabilitation in MS.
7 Do Race and Educational Attainment Impact Subjective Reports of Cognitive Decline?
- Bradley J Dixon, John L Woodard
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 422-423
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Objective:
To establish how participant and informant reports of cognitive decline may differ between groups or remain consistent based on race and level of education in a large, national sample.
Participants and Methods:Participants were selected using the National Alzheimer’s Coordinating Center (NACC) database. Participants who were cognitively healthy at baseline and at least 65 years of age were selected. All informants either lived with the participant or visited the participant weekly (N = 9300). Participant racial groups included White American (n = 7534), Black American (n = 1453), Native American/Alaskan (n = 68), or Asian American (n = 239). Native Hawaiians were not included in this study, given the small sample size (n = 6). Participant education-levels included less than high school degree (n = 395), high school degree or GED (n = 1326), some post-secondary education (n = 1727), bachelor’s degree (n = 2184), and graduate studies (n = 3668). Pairwise comparisons examined each racial and educational attainment group by subjective reports of cognitive decline using Bayesian contingency tables to find reliable evidence to support the null or alternative hypothesis. Participant and informant reports of decline were coded to create a single variable to express no reported decline, participant reported decline, informant reported decline, or agreed decline.
Results:Pairwise race comparisons found moderate evidence that Native Americans reliably reported cognitive decline differently than Black (BF10 = 6.973) and White Americans (BF10 = 3.634). In both cases, the Native American group reported more cases of decline than expected in all groups and reported no decline less than expected. Further analysis found very strong evidence for the null hypothesis when comparing White Americans with Black (BF01 = 60.506) and Asian Americans (BF01 = 65.72). A comparison of Black and Asian Americans found extremely strong evidence for the null hypothesis (BF01 = 199.464). No conclusive evidence was found when comparing reports of Native and Asian Americans (BF01 = 2.401). Pairwise comparisons of educational attainment with subjective reporting of cognitive decline found no evidence of reliable differences between groups. No conclusive evidence was found when comparing the reporting pattern of individuals with some post-secondary education and individuals who did not complete high school (BF01 = 1.257). Moderate evidence for the null hypothesis was found when comparing individuals with a bachelor’s degree with those who did not complete high school (BF01 = 8.57). Strong evidence for the null hypothesis was found when comparing individuals who did not complete high school with those who have studied at the graduate level (BF01 = 17.141) and those who completed high school (BF01 = 16.306). When making all other pairwise comparisons (BF01 > 100), there was extremely strong evidence for the null hypothesis.
Conclusions:These findings suggest that how participants and their informants report cognitive decline does not differ based upon educational attainment in almost all cases, and no evidence was found supporting differences based upon educational attainment. There is evidence that Native Americans/Native Alaskans and their informants report more cognitive decline compared to White and Black Americans. However, the findings suggest that White, Black, and Asian Americans do not differ in how participants and their informants report cognitive decline.
1 Associations of Locus of Control and Memory Self-Awareness in Older Adults with and without MCI
- Mary E Garcia, Jeanine M Parisi, Sarah Cook, Ian McDonough, Alexandra J Weigand, Alexandra L Clark, Michael Marsiske, Kelsey R Thomas
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 676-677
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Objective:
While loss of insight into one’s cognitive impairment (anosognosia) is a feature in Alzheimer’s disease dementia, less is known about memory self-awareness in cognitively unimpaired (CU) older adults or mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or factors that may impact self-awareness. Locus of control, specifically external locus of control, has been linked to worse cognitive/health outcomes, though little work has examined locus of control as it relates to self-awareness of memory functioning or across cognitive impairment status. Therefore, we examined associations between locus of control and memory self-awareness and whether MCI status impacted these associations.
Participants and Methods:Participants from the Advanced Cognitive Training for Independent and Vital Elderly (ACTIVE) study (mean age=73.51; 76% women; 26% Black/African American) were classified as CU (n=2177) or MCI (amnestic n=313; non-amnestic n=170) using Neuropsychological Criteria. A memory composite score measured objective memory performance and the Memory Functioning Questionnaire measured subjective memory. Memory self-awareness was defined as objective memory minus subjective memory, with positive values indicating overreporting of memory difficulties relative to actual performance (hypernosognosia) and negative values indicating underreporting (hyponosognosia). Internal (i.e., personal skills/attributes dictate life events) and external (i.e., environment/others dictate life events) locus of control scores came from the Personality in Intellectual Aging Contexts Inventory. General linear models, adjusting for age, education, sex/gender, depressive symptoms, general health, and vocabulary examined the effects of internal and external locus of control on memory self-awareness and whether MCI status moderated these associations.
Results:Amnestic and non-amnestic MCI participants reported lower internal and higher external locus of control than CU participants. There was a main effect of MCI status on memory self-awareness such that amnestic MCI participants showed the greatest degree of hyponosognosia/underreporting, followed by non-amnestic MCI, and CU participants slightly overreported their memory difficulties. While, on average, participants were fairly accurate at reporting their degree of memory difficulty, internal locus of control was negatively associated with self-awareness such that higher internal locus of control was associated with greater underreporting (ß=-.127, 95% CI [-.164, -.089], p<.001). MCI status did not moderate this association. External locus of control was positively associated with self-awareness such that higher external locus of control was associated with greater hypernosonosia/overreporting (ß=.259, 95% CI [.218, .300], p<.001). Relative to CU, amnestic, but not non-amnestic, MCI showed a stronger association between external locus of control and memory self-awareness. Specifically, higher external locus of control was associated with less underreporting of cognitive difficulties in amnestic MCI (ß=.107, 95% CI [.006, .208], p=.038).
Conclusions:In CU participants, higher external locus of control was associated with greater hypernosognosia/overreporting. In amnestic MCI, the lower external locus of control associations with greater underreporting of objective cognitive difficulties suggests that perhaps reduced insight in some people with MCI may result in not realizing the need for external supports, and therefore not asking for help from others. Alternatively, in amnestic participants with greater external locus of control, perhaps the environmental cues/feedback translate to greater accuracy in their memory self-perceptions. Longitudinal analyses are needed to determine how memory self-awareness is related to future cognitive declines.
8 Computational Modeling of Memory Processes in non-CNS Cancer Survivors
- Ruben D Potthoff, Sanne B Schagen, Joost A Agelink van Rentergem
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 526-527
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Objective:
Cognitive impairment is an often-overlooked issue that non-CNS cancer survivors face. Our current understanding of their issues is lacking, as traditional memory sum scores grant us little insight into the underlying cognitive processes of memory and its impairment. We can improve the informativity of memory impairment studies by isolating which cognitive processes are impaired.
Participants and Methods:Participants were breast cancer survivors who received chemotherapy (n=68), and women controls (n=157). The participants completed the Amsterdam Cognition Scan (ACS), in which classical neuropsychological tests are digitally recreated for online at-home administration. Online administration reduces the burden on patients and allows for recording measurements with greater precision. The specific test used to illustrate the effectiveness of our computational modeling approach was the ACS equivalent of the Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test, in which participants are tasked with recalling a list of 15 words five times. We formulated a Hierarchical Bayesian Cognitive Model to replace traditional sum scores and disentangle performance into the more theoretically meaningful concepts of 'memory storage’ and 'memory retrieval'.
Results:A traditional analysis of the sum of trials 1-5 indicated no significant difference between patients and controls (t(223)=-0.99, p = 0.323), with a small effect size (Cohen’s d = -0.14).
For the newly isolated cognitive process “memory storage”, a non-significant difference was found between patients and controls (d=0.10, 95% credible interval on Cohen’s d: [0.25, 0.43]). On the “memory retrieval” process, a medium significant difference was found between patients and controls (d = -0.57, 95% credible interval on Cohen’s d: [-1.00, -0.19]).
Conclusions:The results indicate that the impaired memory processes in cancer patients are not a general impairment across all memory functions, but rather a selective impairment of memory retrieval. Our method of analysis revealed information that would have been left unnoticed had we relied on traditional sum over trials 1-5.
25 Longitudinal Decline in Memory in 1991 Gulf War Veterans: Where you Start Matters.
- Leah A Orlinsky, Kathryn A Price, Clara G Zundel, Kimberly Sullivan, Maxine H Krengel
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 815-816
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Objective:
Memory complaints have been a concern of Gulf War (GW) veterans since their return from the war in 1991, and over time it has been reported that exposures to neurotoxicants during the war have been associated with memory decline from premorbid levels. However, many of the studies that have shown slight or no memory decrements only looked at one time point and have not followed participants to document trajectory of symptoms over time. Longitudinal design is an optimal way to document change in cognitive function over time and the Fort Devens cohort (FDC), the longest running cohort of GW veterans, is ideal for assessing such change. This prospectively designed non-treatment seeking cohort were assessed at multiple timepoints with neuropsychological assessments and surveys. Initial neuropsychological assessments from 1997 showed above average scores on tests of verbal memory (California Verbal Learning Test) and average nonverbal memory (Wechsler Memory Scale-R) performances. A follow-up study of neuropsychological testing was completed between 2019-2022. This study was designed to document change in cognitive status between the two time points.
Participants and Methods:Participants (N=50) from the original 1991 cohort were again tested from 2019-2022. Neuropsychological tests included California Verbal Learning Test-Second edition (CVLT2) for verbal learning, and the visual reproduction subtest from the Wechsler Memory Scale-Revised (WMS-R) for nonverbal learning and memory. For both time points, the average scores of the participants were compared with age scaled scores for each neuropsychological test.
Results:The mean age of our current participants was 58 years. 72% were men. Relative to standardized test norms at the first time point, the scores for total learning from trials 1 through 5 from the CVLT2 were in the above average range relative to age and gender-based norms. During the second time point, the participants average scores on the same scale had dropped to the average range, one full standard deviation below their prior performances. In addition, at the first time point, total learning from visual reproductions was in the average range and dropped to the low average range for the second time point. This value dropped by one-half a standard deviation.
Conclusions:Results showed significant diminishment in verbal and visual memory relative to prior test performances. Whenever possible, documenting the trajectory of symptoms relative to where each participant started on neuropsychological functional outcomes is key to understanding the longitudinal impact of neurotoxicant and other war-related exposures in military veterans. Given this decline, further assessment of GW veterans’ cognitive trajectories is warranted.
21 A Comparison of the Memory and Non-Memory Based Performance Validity Measures for Detecting Invalid Neuropsychological Test Performance among Individuals with and without Memory Impairment
- Humza M Khan, Maximillian A Obolsky, Gabriel P Ovsiew, Jason R Soble, Zachary J Resch
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 703-704
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Few to no studies have directly compared the relative classification accuracies of the memory-based (Brief Visuospatial Memory Test-Revised Recognition Discrimination [BVMT-R RD] and Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test Forced Choice [RAVLT FC]) and non-memory based (Reliable Digit Span [RDS] and Stroop Color and Word Test Word Reading trial [SCWT WR]) embedded performance validity tests (PVTs). This study’s main objective was to evaluate their relative classification accuracies head-to-head, as well as examine how their psychometric properties may vary among subgroups with and without genuine memory impairment.
Participants and Methods:This cross-sectional study included 293 adult patients who were administered the BVMT-R, WAIS-IV Digit Span, RAVLT and SCWT during outpatient neuropsychological evaluation at a Midwestern academic medical center. The overall sample was 58.0% female, 36.2% non-Hispanic White, 41.3% non-Hispanic Black, 15.7% Hispanic, 4.8% Asian/Pacific Islander, and 2.0% other, with a mean age of 45.7 (SD=15.8) and a mean education of 13.9 years (SD=2.8). Three patients had missing data, resulting in a final sample size of 290. Two hundred thirty-three patients (80%) were classified as having valid neurocognitive performance and 57 (20%) as having invalid neurocognitive performance based on performance across four independent, criterion PVTs (i.e., Test of Malingering Memory Trial 1, Word Choice Test, Dot Counting Test, Medical Symptom Validity Test). Of those with valid neurocognitive performance, 76 (48%) patients were considered as having genuine memory impairment through a memory composite band score (T<37 for (RAVLT Delayed Recall T-score + BVMT-R Delay Recall T-score/2).
Results:The average memory composite band score for valid neurocognitive scores was T = 49.63 as compared to T = 27.57 for genuine memory impairment individuals. Receiver operating characteristic [ROC] curve analyses yielded significant areas under the curve (AUCs=.79-.87) for all four validity indices (p’s < .001). When maintaining acceptable specificity (91%-95%), all validity indices demonstrated acceptable yet varied sensitivities (35%-65%). Among the subgroup with genuine memory impairment, ROC curve analyses yielded significantly lower AUCs (.64-.69) for three validity indices (p’s < .001), except RDS (AUC=.644). At acceptable specificity (88%-93%), they yielded significantly lower sensitivities across indices (19%-39%). In the current sample, RAVLT FC and BVMT-R RD had the largest changes in sensitivities, with 19% and 26% sensitivity/90%-92% specificity at optimal cut-scores of <10 and <2, respectively, for individuals with memory impairment, compared to 65% and 61% sensitivity/94% specificity at optimal cut-scores of <13 and <4, respectively, for those without memory impairment.
Conclusions:Of the four validity scales, memory-based embedded PVTs yielded higher sensitivities while maintaining acceptable specificity compared to non-memory based embedded PVTs. However, they were also susceptible to the greatest declines in sensitivity among the subgroup with genuine memory impairment. As a result, careful consideration should be given to using memory-based embedded PVTs among individuals with clinically significant memory impairment based on other sources of information (e.g., clinical history, behavioral observation).
24 Longitudinal Neuropsychological Functioning in Gulf War Veterans Exposed to Neurotoxicants and War-Related Trauma
- Kathryn A Price, Leah A Orlinsky, Clara G Zundel, Kimberly Sullivan, Maxine H Krengel
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- Journal:
- Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society / Volume 29 / Issue s1 / November 2023
- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 21 December 2023, pp. 814-815
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Objective:
Gulf War (GW) veterans were exposed to many neurotoxicants during the 1990-1991 Gulf War. Neurotoxicants included: chemical warfare such as sarin nerve gas, combustion byproducts from oil well fires and diesel fuels from tent heaters, pesticides, and prophylactic anti- nerve gas pyridostigmine bromide pills (PB); all of which have been associated with both cognitive and mood concerns. There are few longitudinal studies that have examined cognitive functioning regarding these toxicant exposures. In our longitudinal Fort Devens cohort, we found decrements over time in the area of verbal learning and memory but no differences in measures of nonverbal memory and executive function. To describe changes more accurately over time in this GW veteran cohort, we examined cognitive functioning in those with probable Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD) versus those without.
Participants and Methods:The FDC is the longest running cohort of GW veterans with initial baseline cognitive, mood, exposure and trauma assessments in 1997-1998 and follow-up evaluations in 2019-2022. FDC veterans (N=48) who completed both time points were the participants for this study. Veterans were categorized into dichotomous (yes/no) groups of PTSD classification. The PTSD checklist (PCL) was used to determine PTSD case status. Symptom ratings on the PCL were summed (range:17-85) and a cutoff score of 36 or higher was utilized to indicate probable PTSD. Neuropsychological measures of mood (POMS) and memory (Visual Reproductions from the Weschler Memory Scale-R; California Verbal Learning Test Second Edition; CVLT2) and executive function and language; (Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System- Color Word and Verbal fluency- Animals) were compared overtime using Paired T-tests.
Results:The study sample (N=48) was 92% male and 96% reported active-duty status at the time of the GW. Mean current age was 58 years. All veterans reported exposure to at least one war-related toxicant. 48% met criteria for probable PTSD (N = 23) while 52% did not (n=25). No differences between groups were found in any of the POMS subscales, nor were differences seen in verbal memory, executive function, or language tasks. There were, however, significant differences in nonverbal memory in those with probable PTSD showing fewer details recalled during delay on the WMS-R Visual Reproductions (p<0.05).
Conclusions:In this longitudinal analysis, GW veterans with PTSD showed declines in nonverbal memory and consistent levels of function in all other tasks. Basic mood scales did not show decline; therefore, these results are not due to generalized changes in mood. All participants reported at least one neurotoxicant exposure and we did not have the power to examine the impact of the individual exposures, thus we cannot rule any contributing factors other than PTSD. This study highlights the importance of longitudinal follow up and continual documentation of GW veterans’ memory performance and their endorsement of mood symptoms overtime. Specifically, these findings reveal that future studies should examine the prolonged course of memory and mood symptomatology in GW veterans who have endorsed a traumatic experience.