| Literature DB >> 30303036 |
Rosalind Kalb1, Meghan Beier2, Ralph Hb Benedict3, Leigh Charvet4, Kathleen Costello1, Anthony Feinstein5, Jeffrey Gingold1, Yael Goverover6, June Halper7, Colleen Harris8, Lori Kostich9, Lauren Krupp10, Ellen Lathi11, Nicholas LaRocca1, Ben Thrower12, John DeLuca13.
Abstract
PURPOSE: To promote understanding of cognitive impairment in multiple sclerosis (MS), recommend optimal screening, monitoring, and treatment strategies, and address barriers to optimal management.Entities:
Keywords: Multiple sclerosis; cognition; cognitive dysfunction; rehabilitation; remediation; screening; treatment
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30303036 PMCID: PMC6238181 DOI: 10.1177/1352458518803785
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mult Scler ISSN: 1352-4585 Impact factor: 6.312
Recommendations for education, assessment, treatment, and access.
| Education and awareness |
|---|
| • Individuals diagnosed with MS and their family members need information about common cognitive changes and their impact on activities, participation, and relationships. |
| Assessment and management |
| • |
| Access |
| • Access to adequate screening, assessment, and remediation is essential due to the prevalence of cognitive deficits in the MS population—even in the earliest stages of the disease—and their impact on employment, activities of daily living, relationships, and communication. |
MS: multiple sclerosis.
Impact of cognitive deficits on daily functioning and quality of life.
| Work, school, activity participation, coping, and quality of life |
|---|
| • Cognitive impairment predicts limitations in the workplace and in social settings independent of level of physical disability.[ |
| Driving |
| • Thalamic brain atrophy predicts number of motor vehicle violations among people with MS compared to healthy controls.[ |
| Medical decision-making and adherence |
| • Progressive MS patients with deficits in verbal learning, memory, and verbal fluency perform less well on appreciation, reasoning, and understanding consent standards, suggesting that these individuals are less able to make informed decisions about their treatment.[ |
| Money management |
| • Compared with healthy controls and cognitively intact MS patients, cognitively impaired people with MS have significantly reduced money management skills.[ |
| Impact on caregivers |
| • Caregivers of people with MS experience high levels of distress and a reduced quality of life related to their partners’ cognitive impairment and psychiatric symptoms, beyond that related to their physical symptoms.[ |
SPMS: secondary progressive MS; MS: multiple sclerosis.
Validated screening and evaluation tools used in MS.
| Screening and monitoring |
|---|
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MS: multiple sclerosis; EDSS: Expanded Disability Status Scale.
Treatment modalities for cognitive impairment in MS.
| Remediation |
|---|
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| • Building on prior research demonstrating that items self-generated by an individual are remembered more accurately than items presented by someone else,[ |
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| • Sumowski et al.[ |
| Exercise |
| • In an RCT of a multimodal exercise training program in persons with marked mobility impairment, Sandroff et al.[ |
| Pharmacologic management |
| • The variable rate at which cognitive changes progress in MS makes it difficult to study pharmacological interventions in controlled clinical trials. To date, clinical trials of symptomatic treatments for cognitive impairment in MS have produced mixed results, although some individuals appear to have derived limited benefit (amantadine,[ |
MS: multiple sclerosis.
Strategies to address barriers to optimal care.
| Strategies to increase early screening and ongoing monitoring |
| • Enhancing education, via the development and dissemination of “toolkits” for everyone affected by MS (patients, family members, and healthcare providers) about the impact of MS on cognition and available screening and treatment options. |
| Strategies to increase access to more complete cognitive evaluation |
| • Providing referral resources for patients and providers, including the National MS Society (800-344-4867); American Psychological Association (APA— |
| Strategies to enhance comprehensive management of cognitive dysfunction |
| • Increasing the number of clinicians who are trained to treat cognitive dysfunction by integrating educational content into existing training programs for psychologists, occupational therapists, speech/language pathologists, brain injury specialists, and others. |
MS: multiple sclerosis; SDMT: Symbol Digit Modalities Test.