| Literature DB >> 31390344 |
Nadja Kartschmit1, Rafael Mikolajczyk1, Torsten Schubert2, Maria Elena Lacruz1.
Abstract
AIM: The aim of this systematic review was to summarize and critically appraise the quality of published literature on measurement properties of questionnaires assessing Cognitive Reserve (CR) in adults (>18 years).Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31390344 PMCID: PMC6685632 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0219851
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Flowchart article selection.
Definition and operationalization of measurement properties (adapted from COSMIN [26,27] and Rainey et al.[29]).
CR: Cognitive Reserve.
| Term | Definition and operationalization |
|---|---|
| Cross-cultural | The degree to which the translated version of the CR questionnaire adequately reflects the original CR questionnaire. We only considered the methodological quality of the translation process itself. |
| Content | The degree to which the content of the CR questionnaires adequately reflects the CR construct as defined by Stern et al.[ |
| Construct | The degree to which the scores of the questionnaire are in line with the CR hypothesis [ |
| Convergent | The degree to which the total score of the questionnaire is related to a common CR proxy (e.g. education, premorbid intelligence). Since common single CR proxies are only one part in building CR and usually describe a concept different from CR, a moderate rather than a high correlation is expected. |
| Structural | The degree to which the scores of the questionnaire adequately reflect the dimensionality of the CR construct, which can be ascertained with item response theory test, exploratory or confirmatory factor analysis. |
| Internal consistency | The degree of interrelationships among items, which is calculated with the Cronbach’s alpha. |
| Reliability | The proportion of total variance due to “real” differences between participants. |
| Measurement error | The random and systematic error of a score, which is not ascribable to a “real” change in the CR construct. |
Studies included in the systematic review by questionnaire.
The study on the development of the questionnaire is marked in bold. SD = standard deviation; Q = quartile; DSM = diagnostic and statistical manual; NINCDS-ADRDA = National Institute of Neurological and Communicative Disorders and Stroke and the Alzheimer's Disease and Related Disorders Association; MMSE = mini mental state examination.
| Study | Population | Sampling Method | Total n (% females) | Age in years | Language (country) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Amodio et al. [ | Participants with cirrhosis without overt hepatic encephalopathy | Outpatients recruited in neurological clinic at university hospital in Padua presenting for the detection of minimal hepatic encephalopathy | 82 (27%) | Median 62 (Q1 –Q3 = 54–68) | Italian (Italy) |
| Arcara et al. [ | Participants aged 65 or older without psychiatric or neurological illness, MMSE > 24 | No information provided | 60 (57%) | Mean 73.3 (SD = 7.1), range = 65–98 | Italian (Italy) |
| Ciccarelli et al. [ | Parkinson disease patients without dementia or other neurological disorders | Random selection of patients at the Center for Medicine of the Aging according to UK Brain Bank criteria | 35 (23%) | Mean 76.1 (SD = 7.1) | Italian (Italy) |
| Fenu et al. [ | Patients with relapsing remitting Multiple Sclerosis | Recruited at Multiple Sclerosis | 195 (63%) | Mean 43 (SD = 11.2) | Italian (Italy) |
| Maiovis et al. [ | Young adults (18–44 years), middle-aged adults (45–69 years), elderly adults (70–89 years) without major neurologic or psychiatric disorder | Random selection of participants from as many Greek regions as possible | 313 young adults (73%), 148 middle-aged adults (54%) and 130 elderly adults (62%) | Young adults mean 28.78 (SD = 7.74), middle-aged mean 56.12 (SD = 7.22), elderly adults mean 75.82 (SD = 4.55) | Greek (Greece) |
| Maiovis et al. [ | Patients with behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia and primary progressive aphasia without major psychiatric comorbidities | Recruited from January 2012 to September 2014 in the Neurology Department of a tertiary referral center. | 80 (46%) | Mean 67.8 (SD = 8.3) | Greek (Greece) |
| Milanini et al. [ | Asymptomatic HIV participants without opportunistic diseases, older than 60 years and without history of neurological disorders, active psychiatric disorders and alcoholism or drug abuse | Recruited from September 2014 to February 2015 during regular outpatient follow-up in three clinical centers (Agostino Gemelli University Hospital, Rome; S. Caterina Novella Hospital, Galatina and Siena University Hospital, Siena) | 60 (25%) | Median 66 (range = 62–72) | Italian (Italy) |
| Mondini et al. [ | Elderly adults with mild to moderate dementia according to the DSM-V criteria for neuro-cognitive disorders | Recruited from four different geriatric clinics in Northern Italy | 86 (75%) | Mean 77.98 (SD = 7.42) | Italian (Italy) |
| Nunnari et al. [ | Patients aged 25 or older with Multiple Sclerosis, no current corticosteroid use and other neurological or psychiatric illnesses | Recruited consecutively from June 2014 to February 2015 at the IRCCS Center Neurolesi Bonino Pulejo of Messina | 66 (65%) | Mean 39.5 (SD = 9.7) | Italian (Italy) |
| Puccioni & Valessi [ | Older adults without dementia and younger controls (CR assessed in older adults only) | No information provided | 17 older adults (47%), 18 younger adults (50%) | Older adults mean 73 (range = 69–79), younger adults mean 24 (range = 18–34) | Italian (Italy) |
| Volpi et al. [ | Patients with subjective cognitive impairment (SCI) and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) | Patients recruited at the Memory Unit of the Neurological Clinic, University of Pisa between January 2010 to July 2013 | 93 SCI patients (45%), 93 MCI patients (52%) | SCI patients mean 72.8 (SD = 5.8), MCI patients mean 75.1 (SD = 4.8) | Italian (Italy) |
| Bartres-Faz et al. [ | Participants without neurological or psychiatric medical diagnosis | Participants from the Barcelona Brain Health Initiative (prospective longitudinal cohort) meeting the study's inclusion criteria | 1081 (63%) | Mean 52.0 (SD = 7.1); range = 40–65 | Spanish (Spain) |
| Ferreira [ | Healthy middle-aged adults without psychiatric or neurologic disorders and MMSE ≥26 | Recruited from the GENIC-database (Group of Neuropsychological Studies of the Canary Islands) | 82 (51%) | Mean 45.1 (SD = 3.9) | Spanish (Spain) |
| Harris et al. [ | Participants with mild cognitive impairment, Alzheimer’s disease and no cognitive impairment | Participants from the Argentina Alzheimer’s Disease Neuroimaging Initiative (ADNI) database recruited at the Neurological Institute of Investigation meeting the study's inclusion criteria | 33 (8 normal cognitive aging (50%), 23 MCI (48%), 2 AD (0%)) | Normal aging mean 60.75 (SD = 6.67), | Spanish (Argentina) |
| López-Higes et al. [ | Participants aged 60 years and older with MMSE ≥26 | Recruited from different nursing homes and day care centers in Madrid | 83 (53%) | Mean 64.8 (SD = 4.3) | Spanish (Spain) |
| López-Higes et al. [ | Participants with MMSE ≥24 at baseline | Recruited from the Center for Cognitive Impairment Prevention (Public | 81 (68%) | Cognitively intact participants’ mean 70.9 (SD = 4.2); participants with subjective cognitive decline mean 71.4 (SD = 4.8) | Spanish (Spain) |
| López-Higes et al. [ | Participants aged 60 years and older with MMSE > 26 | Recruited from different nursing homes and day care centers in Madrid | 83 (53%) | Mean 64.8 (SD = 4.3), range = 60–75 | Spanish (Spain) |
| Pedrero-Pérez et al. [ | Patients under treatment for substance addiction without cognitive impairment | Recruited consecutively in public health care center for treatment of substance addiction | 57 (30%) | Mean 39 (SD = 13) in men; mean 44 (SD = 12) in women | Spanish (Spain) |
| Sobral et al. [ | Outpatients with probable Alzheimer disease according to DSM-IV criteria | Convenience sample recruited at the psychogeriatric service of a psychiatric hospital | 75 (73%) | Mean 80.2 (SD = 5.64); range = 61–92 | Portuguese (Portugal) |
| Sobral et al [ | Outpatients with probable Alzheimer disease according to DSM-IV criteria | Convenience sample recruited at the psychogeriatric service of a psychiatric hospital | 75 (73%) | Mean 80.2 (SD = 5.64); range = 61–92 | Portuguese (Portugal) |
| Vasquez-Amezquita [ | Adults aged 60 years or older, right-handed and without psychiatric or neurological diseases | Convenience sample recruited from day care center in Ibagué (Colombia) | 30 (87%) | Mean 70.0 (SD = 6.6) | Spanish (Colombia) |
| Wikee & Martella [ | Healthy, elderly adults (> 65 years); | Recruited at a sports center and the community Pudahuel, Santiago de Chile | 60 (20 per group, group 1: 85%, group 2: 85%, group 3: 90%) | Group 1 mean 71 (SD = 4.4), group 2 mean 69 (SD = 3.3), group 3 mean 71 (SD = 6.4) | Spanish (Chile) |
| Altieri et al [ | Participants without psychiatric or neurological illness, drug or alcohol abuse, MMSE > 23.8 | Convenience sample recruited at universities, churches, gyms, and community centers | 547 (50%) | Mean 49.2 (SD = 20.2); range 18–89 | Italian (Italy) |
| Cancino et al. [ | Older participants without neurological disease or depression | Convenience sample (no further information provided) | 206 (77%) | Mean 69 (SD = 0.5) | Spanish (Chile) |
| León et al. [ | Adults (aged 36–64 years) and elderly adults (≥65 years) without history of psychiatric or neurological illness, drug consumption or head injury, MMSE >27 | Recruited from social clubs, social centers, entertainment centers and the University of Almeria | 117 (87 adults (62%) and 30 elderly adults (73%)) | Adults mean 49 (SD = 0.8), elderly adults mean 73 (SD = 1.1) | Spanish (Spain) |
| León et al. [ | Healthy individuals older than 65 years | No information provided | 30 (73%) | Mean 72.9 (SD = 6.0) | Spanish (Spain) |
| León-Estrada et al. [ | Adults (aged 36–64 years) and elderly adults (≥65 years) without history of psychiatric or neurological illness, drug consumption or head injury, MMSE >27 | Recruited from social clubs, social centers, entertainment centers and the University of Almeria. | 172 (110 adults (60%), 62 elderly adults (65%)) | Adults mean 48.54 (SD = 7.29), elderly adults mean70.52 (SD = 5.61) | Spanish (Spain) |
| Roldan-Tapia et al. [ | Adults (aged 36–64 years) and elderly adults (≥65 years) without history of psychiatric or neurological illness, drug consumption or head injury, MMSE >27 | Recruited from social clubs, entertainment centers, and the University of Almeria’s Center for Adult Education. | 140 (98 adults (65%), 42 elderly adults (69%)) | Adults mean 49.15 (SD = 7.18). Elderly adults mean 71.88 (SD = 5.62) | Spanish (Spain) |
| Hindle et al. [ | Parkinson disease patients with MMSE ≥26 above 60 years and Hoehn-Yahr scale stage 1 to 3 | Recruited through Movement Disorder Clinics in District Hospitals run by Geriatricians or Neurologists with specific expertise and training in the assessment and management of Parkinson disease (part of the Bilingualism as a protective factor in Age-related Neurodegenerative Conditions (BANC) study) | 69 (28%) | Mean 73.1 (SD = 6.7) | English (UK) |
| Lavrencic et al. [ | Right-handed older adults without uncontrolled hypertension, recent history of cancer or any neurological or psychiatric disorder | Recruited from Magill and surrounding areas, South Australia | 115 (62%) | Mean 68.5 (SD = 5.9); range = 60–85 | English (Australia) |
| Opdebeeck et al. [ | Healthy participants aged over 60 years | Recruited from Agewell centers, over 50s clubs, church groups, active retirement groups, and flyers advertising the study using purposive snowball sampling | 236 (62%) | Mean 71 (SD = 7.7), range = 60–92 | English (UK and Republic of Ireland) |
General characteristics of the studied CR questionnaires.
CRIq = Cognitive Reserve Index Questionnaire, CRQ = Cognitive Reserve Questionnaire, CRS = Cognitive Reserve Scale, LEQ = Lifetime of Experience Questionnaire, RICE = Retrospective Indigenous Childhood Enrichment scale, PCAS = Premorbid Cognitive Abilities Scale.
| Questionnaire | Life-span | Target population | Dimensions/subscales | Mode of administration | Number of items, response options | Administration time | Scoring | Available in |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CRIq | Unrestricted | General adult population | Education, working activity, leisure time | Self-report or relative-report (semi-structured interview) | 24 items, numerical scale (number of years) and dichotomous answers | 15 minutes | 3 sub-scores for the dimensions, 1 total score with 5 levels according to sum of total score (low to high CR) | Italian, Greek, English, French, German, Spanish, Portuguese, Catalan, Czech, Dutch, Latvian |
| CRQ | Unrestricted | General adult population | Education, parent's education, leisure time, bilingualism | Self-report or relative-report | 8 items, 3 to 6-point Likert scale | 2 min. | Score ranging from 0–25 | Spanish, Portuguese |
| CRS | 3 stages (18–35 years, 36–64 years, over the age of 65) | General adult population | Daily activities, training information, hobbies, and social life | Self-report | 24 items, 5-point Likert scale | 15 min. | Score ranging from 0–96 | Spanish, Italian, English |
| LEQ | 3 stages (between 13 and 30 years, from 30 to 65 years and from 65 years) | General adult population | Specific (education, occupation) and non-specific mental activity (leisure time) for each life-span | Self-report | 42 items, 6-point Likert scale and open questions | 30 min. | 3 sub-scores for life-spans, 1 total score with each dimensions contributing equally | English |
| PCAS | Premorbid period with 10-year time frame | Low-educated population with dementia | Education, occupation, reading, writing, and calculation abilities, use of technology, abilities to search for information, reading habits | Relative-report | 19 items, 2-point to 6-point Likert Scale | Not reported | Score ranging from 0 to 30 | Portuguese, English |
| RICE | Up to 15 years of age inclusively | Aboriginal Australians | Traditional, community, physical activity, reading and playing games | Self-report | 21 items, 5-point Likert scale | Not reported | Score ranging from 19 to 81 | English |
Risk of bias in each study on measurements aspects by questionnaire (the terms denote the quality of measurement, not the result of the measurement).
| Study | Cross‐cultural | Content validity | Construct validity | Convergent validity | Structural validity | Internal consistency | Reliability (test-retest) | Measurement error | Responsiveness |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| fair | fair | good | poor | ||||||
| Amodio et al. [ | excellent | ||||||||
| Arcara et al. [ | fair | ||||||||
| Ciccarelli et al. [ | good | ||||||||
| Fenu et al. [ | excellent | ||||||||
| Maiovis et al. [ | fair | poor | |||||||
| Maiovis et al. [ | excellent | ||||||||
| Milanini et al. [ | good | ||||||||
| Mondini et al. [ | poor | ||||||||
| Nunnari et al. [ | excellent | ||||||||
| Puccioni & Valessi [ | fair | ||||||||
| Volpi et al. [ | good | ||||||||
| poor | good | ||||||||
| Bartres-Faz et al. [ | good | ||||||||
| Ferreira [ | good | ||||||||
| Harris et al. [ | good | ||||||||
| López-Higes et al. [ | poor | ||||||||
| López-Higes et al. [ | fair | ||||||||
| López-Higes et al. [ | fair | ||||||||
| Pedrero-Perez et al. [ | good | fair | good | good | |||||
| Sobral et al. [ | good | good | |||||||
| Sobral et al [ | fair | good | |||||||
| Vasquez-Amezquita et al. [ | poor | ||||||||
| Wikee & Martella [ | poor | ||||||||
| good | poor | fair | poor | ||||||
| Altieri et al [ | good | good | good | poor | good | ||||
| Cancino et al. [ | good | ||||||||
| León et al. [ | good | good | poor | ||||||
| León et al. [ | poor | ||||||||
| León-Estrada et al. [ | fair | poor | poor | fair | |||||
| Roldan-Tapia et al. [ | good | ||||||||
| fair | good | poor | poor | good | good | ||||
| Hindle et al. [ | good | ||||||||
| Lavrencic et al. [ | fair | ||||||||
| Opdebeeck et al.[ | good | ||||||||
| fair | fair | good | good | good | good | ||||
| good | good | good | good | good |
* Only the translation process was evaluated.
Synthesis of measurement properties per questionnaire (terms denote quality of evidence, not the content).
+ or - moderate evidence positive/negative results, +/- conflicting evidence, ? Only poor methodological studies or not all information for proper assessment reported, N/A information not available Synthesis derived from a single study.
| Questionnaire | Content | Structural validity | Internal consistency | Reliability | Measurement error | Hypotheses testing for construct validity | Convergent validity | Responsiveness |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CRIq | + | N/A | ? | N/A | N/A | + | + | ? |
| CRQ | ? | + | + | N/A | N/A | + | + | - |
| CRS | + | + | - | + | ? | +/- | +/- (3 studies) | N/A |
| LEQ | + | ? | - | + | N/A | +/- | + | + |
| PCAS | + | + | + | + | N/A | + | + | N/A |
| RICE | + | ? | + | + | N/A | N/A | + | N/A |