| Literature DB >> 35800079 |
Anna M Hood1, Lori E Crosby2,3,4, Hanne Stotesbury5, Melanie Kölbel5, Fenella J Kirkham5.
Abstract
Pediatric patients with sickle cell disease (SCD) experience a range of medical complications that result in significant morbidity and mortality. Recent advances in prophylactic and curative treatment approaches have highlighted the need for sensitive and clinically-meaningful trial endpoints. The detrimental effects of cognitive and psychological difficulties on social and economic mobility are well described. Although numerous reviews have assessed cognitive outcomes in other rare genetic disorders, SCD has not received the same focus. This review describes the cognitive (i.e., executive function and processing speed) and psychological domains (i.e., depression and anxiety) that are consistently associated with SCD pathology and, therefore, may be of particular interest as clinical trial endpoints. We then discuss corresponding well-validated and reliable cognitive tests and patient-reported outcomes (PROs) that may be appropriate for clinical trials given their robust psychometric properties, ease of administration, and previous use in the SCD population. Further, we provide a discussion of potential pitfalls and considerations to guide endpoint selection. In line with the move toward patient-centered medicine, we identify specific tests (e.g., NIH Toolbox Cognition Module, Wechsler Cancellation Test) and psychological PROs (e.g., PROMIS depression and anxiety scales) that are sensitive to SCD morbidity and have the potential to capture changes that are clinically meaningful in the context of patients' day to day lives. In particularly vulnerable cognitive domains, such as executive function, we highlight the advantages of composite over single-test scores within the context of trials. We also identify general (i.e., practice effects, disease heterogeneity) and SCD-specific considerations (i.e., genotype, treatment course, and disease course, including degree of neurologic, pain, and sleep morbidity) for trial measures. Executive function composites hold particular promise as trial endpoints that are clinically meaningful, amenable to change, relatively easy to collect, and can be incorporated into the routine care of patients with SCD in various settings and countries.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety; depression; executive function; intervention; processing speed
Year: 2022 PMID: 35800079 PMCID: PMC9253275 DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2022.835823
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Neurol ISSN: 1664-2295 Impact factor: 4.086
Figure 1An overview of treatment options for pediatric patients with sickle cell disease. *Hydroxycarbamide was used off label for pediatric patients with sickle cell disease before 2017. Bone marrow transplantation requires a matched donor.
Intelligence quotient (IQ)—considerations for use as a cognitive endpoint in clinical trials of pediatric patients with sickle cell disease.
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| IQ is a total score derived from a set of standardized subtests (i.e., verbal and perceptual reasoning) designed to assess human intelligence. Each specific subtest (raw score) is compared to other children in the same age group (normative sample). Generally, an average IQ is 100 with a standard deviation of 15. Sixty-eight percent of population scores lie between 85 and 115. | IQ represents an aggregate or global capacity comprising a set of related but distinguishable abilities ( | The Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence Second Edition (WASI-II 2 or 4 subtest versions) takes 15–30 min to complete, respectively, can be given to pediatric patients aged as young as 6 years of age, and IQ along with verbal comprehension and perceptual reasoning indices can be obtained ( |
| There is limited evidence that interventions to improve IQ have sustained effects after they end ( | ||
| IQ also only captures a subset of cognitive abilities pertinent to everyday functioning. Scores do not comprehensively reflect abilities in areas that are particularly vulnerable in pediatric patients with sickle cell disease. | Researchers may want to match IQ across treatment and placebo arms obtained as a baseline outcome rather than as a primary endpoint. | |
| Full-scale IQ requires administering a minimum of 10 subtests, which can take between 1 and 2 h depending on the participant's age and the need for breaks. This assessment length may be burdensome on both the administrator and the participant. | ||
| Collecting and interpreting IQ data as an endpoint in a clinical trial may be logistically difficult and prohibitively expensive. | ||
| Pediatric patients with sickle cell disease tend to score relatively lower on subtests (i.e., Vocabulary and Similarities) included in estimates or shorter version IQ tests. These tests does not include working memory and processing speed subtests; thus, estimates of IQ may be overestimated. |
Neuropsychological test batteries previously used in the pediatric sickle cell population.
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| NIH toolbox cognition module |
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| Flexibility Inhibition Working memory | DCCS | 4 min | 3–85 | English; | Introduced in 2012 | $500 per year (up to 10 iPads)/1 iPad per participant | Download from iTunes. | Online; in-person; qualified users—psychometrist, psychology graduate students, or psychologist | On iPad—raw, age-corrected SS download to iCloud or email | |
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| Pattern comparison | 3 min | 7–85 | |||||||
| NIH examiner |
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| Flexibility | Set shifting | 5 min | 3–90 | English; Spanish | Normed 2006–2010 | Free/record forms; Computer with PsychoPy Version; has alternate forms | Available to qualified users upon email request | Training videos; qualified users—psychometrist, psychology graduate students, or psychologist | R (Statistical Software) included on the distribution CD | |
| D-KEFS |
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| Flexibility | Trail making | 10 min | 8–89 | English; Dutch; Danish; Norwegian; Swedish | Normed in 2000 | $1,000 kit and scoring, additional cost record forms; Annual license fee plus $1.25 per subtest/uses Q interactive on 2 iPads | Pearson clinical is available to qualified users, e.g., clinical psychologists | Training supervised by licensed/ registered clinical psychologists | By hand; computerized scoring kit; q- interactive (reports can be generated online) | |
| Inhibition | Color interference | 12 min | ||||||||
| Initiation | Design fluency | 10 min | ||||||||
| Fluency | Verbal fluency | 7 min | ||||||||
| Planning | Tower | 15 min | ||||||||
| NEPSY-II |
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| Flexibility | Animal sorting | 10 min | 7–16 | English | Normed in 2006 | $1,000 kit and scoring, additional cost record forms; Annual license fee plus $1.25 per subtest/uses Q interactive on 2 iPads | Pearson Clinical is available to qualified users, e.g., clinical psychologists | Training supervised by licensed/registered clinical psychologists | By hand; computerized scoring kit; q-interactive (reports can be generated online) | |
| Inhibition | Inhibition | 11 min | 5–16 | |||||||
| Fluency | Design fluency | 4 min | 5–12 | |||||||
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| Auditory attention and response set | 11 min | 5–16 | |||||||
| Wechsler tests |
| Coding | 5 min | 6–90 | 21 languages including English; Spanish; | Ns = 2,000–2,500 | $1,400 kit and scoring, $60 per year for scored reports; Annual license fee plus $1.25 per subtest using Q interactive on 2 iPads | Pearson Clinical is available to qualified users, e.g., clinical psychologists | Training supervised by licensed/ registered clinical psychologists | By hand; computerized scoring Q global; q- interactive (reports can be generated online) |
| Animal Coding | 5 min | 4–7 | ||||||||
| Symbol Search | 5 min | 6–90 | ||||||||
| Bug Search | 5 min | 4–7 | ||||||||
| Cancellation | 5 min | 4–90 | ||||||||
| Continuous performance test |
| Kiddie CPT | 8 min | 4–7 | English | $2,900 for USB with unlimited use of both tests | Pearson Clinics al available to qualified users, e.g., clinical psychologists | Training supervised by licensed/registered clinical psychologists | Computerized scoring on USB (reports are generated) |
SCD, sickle cell disease; Admin, Administration; DCCS, Dimensional Change Card Sort; Flanker, Flanker Inhibitory Control and Attention; SES, socioeconomic status; SS, standard scores; CPT, Continuous Performance Test; D-KEFS, Delis-Kaplan Executive Function System™; WPPSI, Wechsler Preschool & Primary Scale of Intelligence; WISC, Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children; WAIS, Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale.
Psychological patient-reported outcomes frequently used in the pediatric sickle cell population.
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| PROMIS | Depression Anxiety | 5 min | 5–90 5–90 | English; Spanish; | Ongoing validation; a range of disorders including patients with SCD | Free; | NIH Toolbox app; PROMIS app; REDCap; EPIC; OBERD; healthmeasures.net | Can train research staff, students quickly. Interpretation of scores from a psychologist | By hand; on iPad, download and score using statistical software |
| Beck depression inventory-II (BDI – II) | Depression | 5 min | 13–80 | English; Spanish; | $40 per year for a single scoring subscription; | Pearson clinical-available to qualified users, e.g., clinical psychologists | Can train research staff, students quickly. Interpretation of scores from a psychologist | By hand; on iPad, download and score using statistical software | |
| Patient Health Questionnaire-−9 (PHQ-9) | Depression | 2–5 mins | 11–17 18 and over | 40 languages including English; Spanish; | Freely available | Download online | Can train research staff, students quickly. Interpretation of scores from a psychologist | By hand; on iPad, download and score using statistical software | |
| State-trait anxiety inventory | Anxiety | 10 min | 15 and over | 40 languages including English; Spanish; | Large US sample of college and high school students Small groups of psychiatric, general and medical patients, and young prisoners | $100 Adult complete kit—manual with scoring key and 25 record forms | Mind Garden- available to qualified users, e.g., clinical psychologists | Can train research staff, students quickly. Interpretation of scores from a psychologist | By hand; on iPad, download and score using statistical software |
| Generalized Anxiety Disorder – 7 (GAD – 7) | Anxiety | 2–5 min | 13 and over | 40 languages including English; Spanish; | Freely available | Download online | Can train research staff, students quickly. Interpretation of scores from a psychologist | By hand; on iPad, download and score using statistical software | |
| Child behavior checklist (CBCL) | Emotional and behavioral problems | 10 min | 6–18 | English; | $500 for the computerized starter kit | ASEBA—available to qualified users, e.g., clinical psychologists | Can train research staff, students quickly. Interpretation of scores from a psychologist | By hand; on iPad, download and score using statistical software |
SCD, sickle cell disease; Admin, Administration; PROMIS, Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System; EPIC, Electronic Portfolio of International Credentials; ASEBA, The Achenbach System of Empirically Based Assessment.
Figure 2Description of the process in choosing cognitive domains and psychological function and administering cognitive tests and psychological patient-reported outcomes in clinical trials of pediatric patients with sickle cell disease. NIH, National Institutes of Health; D-KEFS, Delis Kaplan Executive Function System; NEPSY-II, A Developmental NEuroPSYchological Assessment; PROMIS, Patient Reported Outcome Measurement Information System; CDI, Children's Depression Inventory; BAI, Beck Anxiety Inventory, BDI, Beck Depression Inventory-II; RCADS, Revised Children's Anxiety and Depression Scale.