Department of Psychology, Concordia University, Montréal, Quebec, Canada.
Center for Research in Human Development (CRDH), Concordia University, Montréal, Quebec, Canada.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2019 Aug;67(8):1689-1694. doi: 10.1111/jgs.15940. Epub 2019 Apr 24.
Hearing loss (HL) is the third most common chronic health condition in older adults, yet it is often undiagnosed and/or untreated. Given the association between HL and cognitive impairment, it is expected that many people undergoing cognitive screening may have HL. The Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) is a brief screening test that assesses a wide range of cognitive functions sensitive to Alzheimer's disease (AD) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI). Although MoCA items were carefully designed to be sensitive to deficits in MCI, they were not designed to take sensory declines into account. In the current investigation, we examined the MoCA's psychometric properties following omission of subtests primarily dependent on hearing status (memory, digit span, attention to letters, and sentence repetition).
Cross-sectional analytic design (retrospective analysis).
We used the original MoCA validation study data. PARTICIPANTS: Groups consisted of healthy controls (N = 90), subjects with MCI (N = 94), and subjects with mild AD (N = 93).
We assessed sensitivity and specificity using absolute and proportional cutoff score adjustments. We developed receiver operating characteristics curves to determine the best cutoff values for both MCI and AD patients using different combinations of auditory subtest omissions.
Compared with the original MoCA (MCI sensitivity = 90%; specificity = 87%), MCI sensitivity was substantially reduced (absolute scoring = 43%; proportional scoring = 56%) when all auditory subtests were omitted, with the biggest contribution to the reduction coming from the delayed recall subtest. Excluding three subtests and maintaining the delayed recall had no effect on MCI sensitivity but reduced specificity (sensitivity = 94%, specificity: 71% using proportional scoring). AD sensitivity, in contrast, was not strongly influenced by our manipulation and remained relatively high through all three subtest omission combinations.
The current study highlights the contribution of hearing-dependent subtests on the sensitivity and specificity of the MoCA. Clinical recommendations related to these findings are discussed. J Am Geriatr Soc 67:1689-1694, 2019.
听力损失(HL)是老年人中第三常见的慢性健康问题,但它常常未被诊断和/或未得到治疗。鉴于 HL 与认知障碍之间的关联,预计许多接受认知筛查的人可能存在 HL。蒙特利尔认知评估(MoCA)是一种简短的筛查测试,可评估对阿尔茨海默病(AD)和轻度认知障碍(MCI)敏感的广泛认知功能。尽管 MoCA 项目经过精心设计,对 MCI 的缺陷敏感,但并未考虑到感官下降的因素。在当前的研究中,我们在排除主要依赖听力状态的子测试后(记忆,数字跨度,对字母的注意力和句子重复),检查了 MoCA 的心理测量特性。
横断面分析设计(回顾性分析)。
我们使用原始的 MoCA 验证研究数据。
组由健康对照组(N=90),MCI 患者(N=94)和轻度 AD 患者(N=93)组成。
我们使用绝对和比例截止评分调整来评估敏感性和特异性。我们开发了接收器工作特征曲线,以确定不同听觉子测试省略组合下,MCI 和 AD 患者的最佳截止值。
与原始 MoCA(MCI 敏感性= 90%;特异性= 87%)相比,当所有听觉子测试均被省略时,MCI 的敏感性大大降低(绝对评分= 43%;比例评分= 56%),其中延迟回忆测试的贡献最大。排除三个子测试并保留延迟回忆对子测试对 MCI 敏感性没有影响,但降低了特异性(比例评分时,敏感性为 94%,特异性为 71%)。相比之下,AD 的敏感性并未受到我们的操作的强烈影响,并且通过所有三个子测试省略组合,敏感性仍然相对较高。
本研究强调了听力依赖子测试对 MoCA 的敏感性和特异性的贡献。讨论了与这些发现相关的临床建议。J Am Geriatr Soc 67:1689-1694,2019。