Mild cognitive impairment (PD-MCI) is one of the greatest risk factors for future Parkinson's disease dementia (PDD). A recent meta-analysis found that, on average, 31% of patients with PD-MCI converted to PDD within seven years; however, 24% of patients with PD-MCI reverted back to normal cognitive function. Consequently, the false positive rate for predicting PDD among patients with PD-MCI is high, and better predictive markers to define patients at high risk for PDD development are urgently needed. Therefore, a combination of different markers, including clinical, genetic, and other biomarker data, are proposed to increase ability to predict cognitive worsening and dementia. Based on data of the first follow-up of this cohort results indicated that presence of both mild cognitive instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) impairment and PD-MCI dramatically increases the risk for PDD (PubMed ID: 36240089). This study evaluates markers predicting cognitive and IADL long-term outcome in our sample. Additionally, focus of the study is the investigation whether ratings of patients or informants best predicted decline of cognitive impairment and/or everyday function. Clinical data along with other clinical marker and biomarker status will be investigated.
Patients assessments: Most scales (except for Kölner Apraxie Test) were also included in the first follow-up of the sample. Total duration of scales and questionnaires is 4 hours (total time of mandatory in house assessments: 115 min). Demographic and lifestyle data: Age, gender, education, occupation, family history of neurodegenerative diseases, smoking/drinking behavior, height \& weight will be registered. Activities of daily living assessment: The total and subscores of the Pfeffer Functional Activities Questionnaire (score range 0 to 30 higher values indicating more impairment) will be assessed. Additionally patients assessment includes the Parkinson's disease Activity of daily living scale (five level scale, higher values indicating more impairment). Neuropsychological Assessment: History and self-awareness of cognitive deficits will be asked. Overall mean z-score (range -3.00 poor performance to +3.00 excellent performance) and cognitive domain score (mean z-score of tests assigned to one domain) will be quantitatively assessed using the Consortium to Establish a Registry for Alzheimer's Disease (CERAD-Plus) battery, three subtests of the Wechsler Intelligence Test for Adults (WIE), and one subtest of the Leistungsprüfsystem für 50- bis 90-Jährige (LPS 50+). The MMSE included in the CERAD-Plus, as well as the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) will serve as global cognitive screening scales. * Executive functions: Lexical and Phonemic Fluency (CERAD-Plus), Trail Making Test Part B (CERAD-Plus) * Attention/working memory: Digit-Symbol Test (WIE), Letter-Number Sequencing (WIE) * Language: Boston Naming Test (CERAD-Plus), Similarities (WIE) * Memory: Word List Learning, Recall, and Discriminability (CERAD-Plus), Praxis Recall (CERAD-Plus) * Visuospatial abilities: Praxis (CERAD-Plus), Fragmented Words (LPS-50+) The Dementia Apraxia Test developed to assess limb and buccofacial apraxia in neurocognitive disorder patients with Alzheimer's disease and frontotemporal dementia will be additionally applied. For validation purpose, the Kölner Apraxie Screening will be included as well. Clinical motor assessment: The Movement Disorder Society Unified Parkinson's disease rating scale (score 0 to 132) including the Hoehn and Yahr stage (score 0-5) will be applied. The Freezing of Gait Questionnaire (FOG) will be applied. Higher scale values indicated more severe impairment. Additional non-motor assesssment: A comprehensive non-motor assessment will be applied including the Beck Depression Inventory II (BDI-II, score 0-63), the Beck Anxiety Scale (score 0-63), the Non-motor symptom Questionnaire (NMSQ, 0 to 30) and the Parkinson's disease Non-Motor Symptom Scale, subscales 1-5 (PD-NMS-S). In those scales higher values indicated more severe impairment. Optional assessments: * Blood withdrawal - 15 min * Lumbar puncture - 30 min * Ambulatory accelerometry device - 7 days Caregiver assessments: To validate the patients' self-impression, caregiver questionnaires and interview scales will be applied, needing caregivers to be available for at least 38 minutes. Caregiver assessments will only be performed if the respective patient has agreed to the interview. The Bayer Activities of Daily Living Scale (1 point to 10 points with higher values indicating more impairment) answered by the caregiver and the Informant Questionnaire on Cognitive Decline in the Elderly (IQ-CODE, 26 points to 130 points, higher scores indicating more impaired performance) will be analysed.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
130
A detailed neuropsychological test battery will be applied. The Functional Activitites Questionnaire (FAQ) subscores will be used to define cognitive and motor instrumental activities of daily living function
University hospital Tübingen
Tübingen, Baden-Wurttemberg, Germany
RECRUITINGDiagnosis of Parkinson's disease dementia (PDD) / Level II diagnosis of mild cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease (PD-MCI)
Patients will be classified as PD-MCI according to Level-II Movement Disorder Society recommendations if cognitive impairment was present but did not significantly interfere with everyday function \[PubMed ID: 21661055\] according to a personalized interview. PDD was defined according to Movement Disorder Society Task Force criteria \[PubMed ID: 18098298\] if cognitive impairment was present and severe enough to impair activities of daily living function unrelated to motor or autonomic symptoms. Cognitive impairment will be defined according to Level-I (impairment of global cognition) for patients with minimal assessments, or Level-II (performance below 1.5 standard deviation of the population mean reported in the test manuals on at least two tests) for patients assessed using a full cognitive battery. Assessment include a detailed neuropsychological test battery (see below).
Time frame: 6-8 years
Pfeffer Activities of daily living scale
Baseline/follow-up comparison of instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) function (patients' self-impression vs. informant-rating) primarily based on the motor, cognitive and total score of the Pfeffer Activities of daily living scale.
Time frame: 6-8 years
Follow-up score in global cognition
Overall mean z-score (range -3.00 poor performance to +3.00 excellent performance) of all tests assessed will be used to define global cognitive performance. For people with Parkinson's disease and incomplete neuropsychological test scores the MoCA will be used to define global cognitive performance.
Time frame: 6-8 years
Follow-up cognitive domain performance
Mean z-score of tests assigned to one cognitive domain will be used to define domain specific change in cognition.
Time frame: 6-8 years
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