Litcius/Paper detail

Newly self‐administered two‐step tool for screening cognitive function in an ageing Chinese population: an exploratory cross‐sectional study

Jing Nie, Yang Yang, Yining Gao, Wenwen Jiang, Aisikeer Aidina, Fei Sun, Lucas Prieto, Jie Yu, Kang Ju, Lisheng Song, Xia Li

2023General Psychiatry14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background Early screening of cognitive function is critical to dementia treatment and care. However, traditional tests require face‐to‐face administration and are often limited by implementation costs and biases. Aims This study aimed to assess whether the Thoven Cognitive Self‐Assessment (TCSA), a novel, innovative two‐step touchscreen‐based cognition assessment tool, could identify early cognitive impairment due to dementia in older adults. Methods The TCSA was administered to 61 healthy controls (HCs), 46 participants with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and 44 participants diagnosed with dementia recruited from Shanghai. Two outcome measures were generated from the TCSA test: the TCSA primary task score and the TCSA secondary task score. Results The total average scores in the control group for the TCSA primary task and TCSA secondary task were significantly higher than those in the MCI and dementia groups (TCSA primary task : HCs vs MCI group vs dementia group, 8.58±1.76 vs 5.40±2.67 vs 2.74±2.11, F=75.40, p<0.001; TCSA secondary task : HCs vs MCI group vs dementia group, 23.02±3.31 vs 17.95±4.93 vs 11.93±5.50, F=76.46, p<0.001). Moreover, receiver operating characteristic analysis showed that a score below 7.5 for the TCSA primary task and a score below 22.5 for the TCSA secondary task were indicators of MCI. Conclusions The TCSA appears to be efficacious for the detection of cognitive impairment in older adults. It demonstrates the potential for large‐scale cognition screening in community service settings.

Topics & Concepts

Cross-sectional studyPopulation ageingAgeingCognitionGerontologyFunction (biology)PsychologyPopulationMedicineClinical psychologyPsychiatryEnvironmental healthInternal medicinePathologyBiologyEvolutionary biologyDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchOlder Adults Driving StudiesTechnology Use by Older Adults