Tracking early decline in cognitive function in older individuals at risk for Alzheimer disease dementia: the Alzheimer's Disease Cooperative Study Cognitive Function Instrument

Rebecca E Amariglio, Michael C Donohue, Gad A Marshall, Dorene M Rentz, David P Salmon, Steven H Ferris, Stella Karantzoulis, Paul S Aisen, Reisa A Sperling, Alzheimer’s Disease Cooperative Study, Kathy Wild, Georgene Siemjen, Lon Schneider, Alla Sverdlik, Leon Thal, Mary Pay, R Scott Turner, Linda V Nyquist, Ronald C Petersen, Joan McCormick, Karen Bell, Ruth Tejeda, John Morris, Pamela Millsap, Lindy Harrell, Jo Ann Parrish, Karen Dahlman, Adriana DiMatteo, Neelum T Aggaewal, Rose Marie Ferraro, Ranjan Duara, Peggy D Roberts, Paula Ogrocki, Nancy A Slocum, Cynthia Munro, Eric Pfeiffer, Dorothy Baxter, Steven Ferris, Nicole Martingano, Christopher Clark, Kris Gravanda, Judith Saxton, Parick Ketchel, J Michael Ryan, Colleen McCallim, Ruth Mulnard, Catherine McAdams-Ortiz, Myron Weiner, Robbin Peck, Felicia Goldstein, Lisa Kilpatrick, John Ringman, Susan O'Connor, Neill Graff-Radford, Francine Parfitt, Martin Farlow, Nicki Coleman, Brian Ott, Michael Pimental, Christopher van Dyck, Martha MacAvoy, Charles DeCarli, Bobbi Henk, Larry Eisner, Rebecca Radzivill, Barry Baumel, Magdalena Szymczak, Beth Safirstein, Melissa Perez-Velasco, Charles Bernick, Marie L Stallbaum, M Marsel Mesulam, Laura Herzog, Jacobo Mintzer, Effie Hatchett, Paul S Aisen, Carolyn Ward, Reisa Sperling, Kara Campoba, Joy Taylor, Heather Fiedler-Greene, Donald Connor, Suhair Stipho, Robert C Green, Mary-Tara Roth, Rebecca E Amariglio, Michael C Donohue, Gad A Marshall, Dorene M Rentz, David P Salmon, Steven H Ferris, Stella Karantzoulis, Paul S Aisen, Reisa A Sperling, Alzheimer’s Disease Cooperative Study, Kathy Wild, Georgene Siemjen, Lon Schneider, Alla Sverdlik, Leon Thal, Mary Pay, R Scott Turner, Linda V Nyquist, Ronald C Petersen, Joan McCormick, Karen Bell, Ruth Tejeda, John Morris, Pamela Millsap, Lindy Harrell, Jo Ann Parrish, Karen Dahlman, Adriana DiMatteo, Neelum T Aggaewal, Rose Marie Ferraro, Ranjan Duara, Peggy D Roberts, Paula Ogrocki, Nancy A Slocum, Cynthia Munro, Eric Pfeiffer, Dorothy Baxter, Steven Ferris, Nicole Martingano, Christopher Clark, Kris Gravanda, Judith Saxton, Parick Ketchel, J Michael Ryan, Colleen McCallim, Ruth Mulnard, Catherine McAdams-Ortiz, Myron Weiner, Robbin Peck, Felicia Goldstein, Lisa Kilpatrick, John Ringman, Susan O'Connor, Neill Graff-Radford, Francine Parfitt, Martin Farlow, Nicki Coleman, Brian Ott, Michael Pimental, Christopher van Dyck, Martha MacAvoy, Charles DeCarli, Bobbi Henk, Larry Eisner, Rebecca Radzivill, Barry Baumel, Magdalena Szymczak, Beth Safirstein, Melissa Perez-Velasco, Charles Bernick, Marie L Stallbaum, M Marsel Mesulam, Laura Herzog, Jacobo Mintzer, Effie Hatchett, Paul S Aisen, Carolyn Ward, Reisa Sperling, Kara Campoba, Joy Taylor, Heather Fiedler-Greene, Donald Connor, Suhair Stipho, Robert C Green, Mary-Tara Roth

Abstract

Importance: Several large-scale Alzheimer disease (AD) secondary prevention trials have begun to target individuals at the preclinical stage. The success of these trials depends on validated outcome measures that are sensitive to early clinical progression in individuals who are initially asymptomatic.

Objective: To investigate the utility of the Cognitive Function Instrument (CFI) to track early changes in cognitive function in older individuals without clinical impairment at baseline.

Design, setting, and participants: Longitudinal study from February 2002 through February 2007 at participating Alzheimer's Disease Cooperative Study sites. Individuals were followed up annually for 48 months after the baseline visit. The study included 468 healthy older individuals (Clinical Dementia Rating scale [CDR] global scores of 0, above cutoff on the modified Mini-Mental State Examination and Free and Cued Selective Reminding Test) (mean [SD] age, 79.4 [3.6] years; age range, 75.0-93.8 years). All study participants and their study partners completed the self and partner CFIs annually. Individuals also underwent concurrent annual neuropsychological assessment and APOE genotyping.

Main outcomes and measures: The CFI scores between clinical progressors (CDR score, ≥0.5) and nonprogressors (CDR score, 0) and between APOE ε4 carriers and noncarriers were compared. Correlations of change between the CFI scores and neuropsychological performance were assessed longitudinally.

Results: At 48 months, group differences between clinical progressors and non-progressors were significant for self (2.13, SE=0.45, P<.001), partner (5.08, SE=0.59, P<.001), and self plus partner (7.04, SE=0.83, P<.001) CFI total scores. At month 48, APOE ε4 carriers had greater progression than noncarriers on the partner (1.10, SE=0.44, P<.012) and self plus partner (1.56, SE=0.63, P<.014) CFI scores. Both self and partner CFI change were associated with longitudinal cognitive decline (self, ρ=0.32, 95% CI, 0.13 to 0.46; partner, ρ=0.56, 95% CI, 0.42 to 0.68), although findings suggest self-report may be more accurate early in the process, whereas accuracy of partner report improves when there is progression to cognitive impairment.

Conclusions and relevance: Demonstrating long-term clinical benefit will be critical for the success of recently launched secondary prevention trials. The CFI appears to be a brief, but informative potential outcome measure that provides insight into functional abilities at the earliest stages of disease.

Figures

Figure 1. Comparison of CFI Self, Partner,…
Figure 1. Comparison of CFI Self, Partner, and Self+Partner change from baseline by APOE ε4 carrier status and by global Clinical Dementia Rating Scale (CDR) progression status
Change from baseline is estimated by Mixed Models of Repeated Measures with baseline performance, age, education, and Geriatric Depression Scale as covariates. The model treats time from baseline as a categorical variable, and assumes compound symmetric correlation structure and heterogeneous variance over time. The shaded region marks 95% confidence intervals. The APOE group differences are significant (p<0.05) for CFI Partner at months 36 and 48; and for CFI Self+Partner at months 24–48. The CDR-Global Progression group differences are significant at every visit except at months 3 and 12 for CFI Self.
Figure 2. Correlation between CFI (Self, Partner,…
Figure 2. Correlation between CFI (Self, Partner, and Self+Partner) and mADCS-PACC over time
Pearson's correlation coefficients are plotted over time, by version of the CFI, with 95% confidence intervals. Signs for the correlations are inverted.

Source: PubMed

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