| Literature DB >> 22152342 |
Lori Frank1, William R Lenderking, Kellee Howard, Marc Cantillon.
Abstract
Patient-reported outcome (PRO) measures are used to evaluate disease and treatments in many therapeutic areas, capturing relevant aspects of the disorder not obtainable through clinician or informant report, including those for which patients may have a greater level of awareness than those around them. Using PRO measures in mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and prodromal Alzheimer's disease (AD) presents challenges given the presence of cognitive impairment and loss of insight. This overview presents issues relevant to the value of patient report with emphasis on the role of insight. Complex activities of daily living functioning and executive functioning emerge as areas of particular promise for obtaining patient self-report. The full promise of patient self-report has yet to be realized in MCI and prodromal AD, however, in part because of lack of PRO measures developed specifically for mild disease, limited use of best practices in new measure development, and limited attention to psychometric evaluation. Resolving different diagnostic definitions and improving clinical understanding of MCI and prodromal AD will also be critical to the development and use of PRO measures.Entities:
Year: 2011 PMID: 22152342 PMCID: PMC3308024 DOI: 10.1186/alzrt97
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Alzheimers Res Ther Impact factor: 6.982
Summary of select measures relevant to patient-reported outcomes in mild cognitive impairment
| Measure | Reporter | Patient population | Description | Psychometric performance | Comments |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Alzheimer's Disease Cooperative Study Activities of Daily Living (ADCS-ADL) and ADCS ADL-MCI [ | Patient, informant | Mild through severe AD | 23-item inventory of ADL, rated based on extent of assistance the patient requires (independently, with supervision, with physical help): 0 (total independence in performing an activity) to 4 (total inability to act independently). Each question varies in the number of options to chose. Total score range: 0 to 78; higher scores indicate less functional impairment. ADCS ADL-MCI: 18 item and 24 item versions | Widely used, including as endpoint in clinical trials. Developed based on substantial clinical experience; comprehensive item capture | |
| Alzheimer's Disease Cooperative Study Prevention Study (ADL-PI) [ | Patient, informant | Used in mild through severe AD | 20-item measure of ADLs and physical functioning. Five difficulty-based response options from 'as well as usual/no difficulty' to 'a lot of difficulty'; with 'not at all' option. Total score ranges from 0 to 45; higher scores indicate less functional impairment. | Good psychometric performance; item content from established measures | |
| Perceived Deficits Questionnaire (PDQ) [ | Patient | Developed for multiple sclerosis; used in AD and MCI | The PDQ is a part of the Multiple Sclerosis Quality of Life Inventory that assesses self-perceived cognitive difficulties. It consists of 20 items that address cognitive difficulties in four dimensions (attention/concentration, planning/organization, retrospective memory and prospective memory). Items are rated on a five-point scale ranging from 1 (never) to 5 (almost always) | No psychometric data available for MCI/AD | Developed for multiple sclerosis population but content relevant to MCI/AD |
| Multidimensional Assessment of Neurodegenerative Symptoms questionnaire (MANS) [ | Patient, informant | Neurodegenerative disorders generally, early detection through more severe levels | Developed as a multidimensional measure permitting early detection and patient and informant comparison and applicable from mild severity onward. Developed to measure cognitive personality, functional, and motor symptoms. Items are rated on a five-point frequency scale from 0 (never) to 4 (routinely) with Once/occasionally/more than monthly as intermediate anchors | Multiple domains targeted to aid with differential diagnosis. Seeks to be gender-neutral, overcoming gender/activity confounds of other measures. Frequency scale may limit sensitivity | |
| Patient-Reported Outcomes in Cognitive Impairment (PROCOG) | Patient, informant | MCI through moderate AD | 55-item measure of cognitive impairment symptoms and their impact in patients with MCI and mild to moderate AD. There are seven subscales: affect, skill loss, semantic memory, short-term memory, cognitive functioning, social impact, and long-term memory. Items are rated on a five-point Likert scale. Total scores range from 0 to 220. Higher scores indicate greater impact of cognitive impairment | Acceptable psychometric properties but no longitudinal data published. Broad content mixes domain assessment; however, subscales permit more focused domain selection | |
| Mail-In Cognitive Function Screening Instrument [ | Patient | 14-item brief screening instrument assessing cognitive and functional decline; prior year recall period. | Brief screening measure demonstrating sensitivity to subjective memory complaints. Brevity limits comprehensiveness but for intended purpose content is appropriate | ||
| Patient, Informant | 75-item measure of executive functioning in adults composed of two index scores: the Behavioral Rating Index (BRI) and the Metacognitive Index (MI). The BRI has four subscales: inhibit, shift, emotional control, and self-monitor. The MI has five subscales: working memory, initiate, plan/organize, task monitor, and organization of materials. An overall score is obtained as a composite of two index scores. There are also three 'validity' scales used to screen for factors other than executive functioning that could explain scores on the main measure: negativity, infrequency, and inconsistency | No psychometric data reported | Item content targets accepted executive functioning skills | ||
| Cognitive Difficulties Scale (CDS) [ | Patient, Informant | Multiple versions (original was 39-item self-report; 26-item version and 38-item version; family report version available). The 38-item self report version includes items related to difficulties in attention, concentration, orientation, memory, praxis, domestic activities and errands, facial recognition, task efficiency, and name finding. Items are rated on a five-point Likert scale on frequency of difficulty over prior month, from 0 (not at all) to 4 (very often) | Developed from established measures. Provides measure of anosognosia | ||
| Everyday Cognition (ECog) [ | Patient, Informant | 39-item measure of neuropsychological functioning related to cognitive impairment. Items are rated on a four-point scale: 1, better or no change compared to 10 years earlier; 2, questionable/occasionally worse; 3, consistently a little worse; 4, consistently much worse. Higher scores represent worse daily function | Developed to minimize confound with educational level | ||
| Frontal Systems Behavior Scale (FrSBe) [ | Patient, Informant | Multiple therapeutic areas | 46-item behavior scale rates the frontal impairments of apathy, disinhibition, and executive dysfunction, on a five-point Likert scale ranging from almost never (1) to almost always (5) for a maximum score of 240. Higher scores indicate more abnormal behavior | Widely used across medical/psychiatric diseases. Captures cognitive-behavioral aspects of frontal symptoms |
AD, Alzheimer's disease; ADCS, Alzheimer's Disease Cooperative Study; ADL, Activities of Daily Living; ADL-PI, Activities of Daily Living Prevention Instrument; aMCI, amnestic MCI; APOE, apolipoprotein E; BRI, Behavioral Rating Index; BRIEF-A, Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function - Adult version; CDR, Clinical Dementia Rating scale; CDS, Cognitive Difficulties Scale; CES-D, Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale; DAT, dementia of Alzheimer's type; ICC, intra-class correlation coefficient; MCI, mild cognitive impairment; MI, Metacognitive Index; mMMSE, Modified Mini-Mental State Examination; PDQ, Perceived Deficits Questionnaire; PROCOG, Patient-Reported Outcomes in Cognitive Impairment; QOL, quality of life.