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Clinimetrics and feasibility of the Italian version of the Frontal Assessment Battery (FAB) in non-demented Parkinson's disease patients.

Authors :
Aiello, Edoardo Nicolò
D'Iorio, Alfonsina
Solca, Federica
Torre, Silvia
Bonetti, Ruggero
Scheveger, Francesco
Colombo, Eleonora
Maranzano, Alessio
Maderna, Luca
Morelli, Claudia
Doretti, Alberto
Amboni, Marianna
Vitale, Carmine
Verde, Federico
Ferrucci, Roberta
Barbieri, Sergio
Zirone, Eleonora
Priori, Alberto
Pravettoni, Gabriella
Santangelo, Gabriella
Source :
Journal of Neural Transmission. May2023, Vol. 130 Issue 5, p687-696. 10p.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Background: This study aimed at assessing the cross-sectional and longitudinal clinimetrics and feasibility of the Frontal Assessment Battery (FAB) in non-demented Parkinson's disease (PD) patients. Methods: N = 109 PD patients underwent the FAB and the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA). A subsample of patients further underwent a thorough motor, functional and behavioral evaluation (the last including measures of anxiety, depression and apathy). A further subsample was administered a second-level cognitive battery tapping on attention, executive functioning, language, memory, praxis and visuo-spatial abilities. The following properties of the FAB were tested: (1) concurrent validity and diagnostics against the MoCA; (2) convergent validity against the second-level cognitive battery; (4) association with motor, functional and behavioral measures; (5) capability to discriminate patients from healthy controls (HCs; N = 96); (6) assessing its test–retest reliability, susceptibility to practice effects and predictive validity against the MoCA, as well as deriving reliable change indices (RCIs) for it, at a ≈ 6-month interval, within a subsample of patients (N = 33). Results: The FAB predicted MoCA scores at both T0 and T1, converged with the vast majority of second-level cognitive measures and was associated with functional independence and apathy. It accurately identified cognitive impairment (i.e., a below-cut-off MoCA score) in patients, also discriminating patients from HCs. The FAB was reliable at retest and free of practice effects; RCIs were derived according to a standardized regression-based approach. Discussion: The FAB is a clinimetrically sound and feasible screener for detecting dysexecutive-based cognitive impairment in non-demented PD patients. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
03009564
Volume :
130
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Neural Transmission
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
163252353
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00702-023-02624-7