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27 Apathy Associated with Cognition in Older Adults with Chronic Moderate to Severe Traumatic Brain Injury
- Samantha M Vervoordt, Umesh Venkatesan, Andrew Cwiek, Amanda Rabinowitz, Frank G. Hillary
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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. 135-136
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Objective:
Apathy, or loss of motivation and interest, is a common sequela of moderate to severe traumatic brain injury (msTBI) and has been associated with frontal lesions and with executive dysfunction in a sample an average of one year post injury (Andersson & Bergdalen, 2002). In older adults sustaining msTBI in particular, the appearance of apathy is more likely to be comorbid with depression when compared to injury in younger adults (Kant et al., 1998). However, studies have consistently shown an important dissociation between apathy and depression, despite overlapping symptoms, with apathy in particular associated with frontal lobe damage (Worthington & Wood, 2018). The present study holds two primary goals. First, to examine the relationship between current apathy ratings and cognition after controlling for ratings of depression and perceived changes in apathy, to account for the unique relationship of injury-related apathy on cognition. Second, to examine the potential variable role of APOE4 carrier status on depression and apathy ratings.
Participants and Methods:110 older adults with a lifetime history of msTBI (M=9.5 years post-injury) were included as part of a cross-sectional study. Apathy was measured using the Frontal Systems and Behaviors Scale (FrSBe) for both current apathy ratings and perceived change in apathy from pre- to post-injury. Depression was measured using the depression subscale of the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI). Outcome measures included normed scores for learning (HVLT-R total recall), retention (HVLT-R percent retention), processing speed (Trails A), set-shifting and working memory (Trails B, Digit Span Backwards), and phonemic and category fluency (D-KEFS letter and category fluency). The main independent variable of interest was current apathy ratings. Depression and perceived apathy change were included as control variables for all analyses. Vif scores were calculated for all analyses to ensure that variables were not multicollinear. Finally, we ran an ANOVA to examine the relationship between apathy, depression, and APOE4 carrier status.
Results:When controlling for depression and perceived changes in apathy, current apathy ratings were associated with poorer performance on learning (p=.04, n2=.04), processing speed (p=.001, n2=.10), set-shifting (p=.02, n2=.05), attention (p=.04, n2=.04), phonemic fluency (p=.001, n2=.09), category fluency (p=.001, n2=.10). Current apathy ratings were not associated with retention or working memory. Apathy was significantly associated with depression (p <.001), but was not associated with APOE4 carrier status or the interaction between depression and carrier status.
Conclusions:Despite overlap between depressive symptoms and apathy questionnaires (i.e., loss of interest/pleasure), by controlling for depressive symptoms and perceived changes following injury, we demonstrate the significant independent association of apathy and cognition in an older sample with chronic msTBI. Further, although previous work has shown strong associations between depression and APOE4 carrier status in chronic msTBI samples (Vervoordt et al., 2021), there was no significant relation with apathy directly in our sample, providing further evidence that these are neurobiologically distinct syndromes.
1 Quantity or quality? Comparing objective and subjective participation measures to predict quality of life in aging msTBI.
- Andrew P Cwiek, Samantha Vervoordt, Emily E Carter, Frank G Hillary
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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. 113-114
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- Article
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Objective:
Community reintegration and participation have been shown to be significantly correlated to improved Quality of Life (QoL) following moderate to severe traumatic brain injury (msTBI), yet these models often come with significant levels of unaccounted variability (Pierce and Hanks, 2006). Measures for community participation frequently employ objective measures of participation, such as number of outings in a week or current employment status (Migliorini et al., 2016), which may not adequately account for lifestyle differences, especially in aging populations. Less often integrated are subjective measures of an individual’s own belongingness and autonomy within the community (Heineman et al., 2011), also referred to as their participation enfranchisement (PE). The present study examines three questions pertinent to the potential clinical value of PE. First, do measures of objective participation significantly predict an individual’s PE ratings? Second, are both types of measures equally successful predictors of QoL for aging individuals with chronic-stage msTBI. Finally, would controlling for either objective or subjective integration ratings enable neurocognitive assessments to better predict QoL post injury?
Participants and Methods:41 older-adults (M= 65.32; SD= 7.51) with a history of msTBI were included (M= 12.59 years post-injury;SD= 8.29) for analysis. Subjective community integration was measured through the Participation Enfranchisement Survey. The Participation Assessment with Recombined Tools-Objective (PART-O) provided the objective measurement of participation. Quality of life was assessed through the Quality of Life after Brain Injury (QOLIBRI). An estimate of neurocognitive performance was created through the Brief Test of Adult Cognition by Telephone (BTACT), which includes six domains including: verbal-learning and memory (immediate and delayed recall), working memory (digit-span backwards), reasoning (number sequencing), semantic fluency (category fluency), and processing speed (backwards counting). Performance on the BTACT, PE ratings, and PART-O scores were included as the dependent variables in stepwise, linear regression models predicting QoL ratings to assess the differential contribution of the dependent variables and potential interaction effects.
Results:While both the PART-O (f(1,39)=5.52;p=.024,n2=.124) and the PE survey (f(1,39)=14.31 ;p<.001,n2=.268) significantly predicted QoL, the addition of PE in the PART-O model resulted in significant (20.9%) reduction in unaccounted variance. Further in the model controlling for PE, PART-O no longer provides a significant (p=.15) contribution to the model estimating QoL (f(2,38)=8.41; p=.001). Performance on the BTACT correlated with PART-O (p<.0001), but not PE (p=.13) ratings. Finally, across two models controlling for BTACT performance, PE (p=.002,partial n2=.23), but not PART-O (p=.28,partial n2=.031) contributed significantly to QoL predictions. No significant interactions between PART-O, PE, and/or BTACT were observed when added to any model.
Conclusions:MsTBI impacts nearly every facet of an individual’s life, and as such, improving QoL post-injury requires a broad, yet well-considered approach. The objective ratings of participation, subjective PE, BTACT performance, all independently predicted quality of life in this sample. However, after controlling for neurocognitive assessment performance, PE was shown to independently contribute to quality of life, while the PART-O ratings no longer provided significant contribution. While community integration is a vital factor to consider for long-term rehabilitation, tailoring what “integration” means to the patient may hold significant potential to improve long-term quality of life.