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Validation of SATURN, a free, electronic, self‐administered cognitive screening test

David Bissig, Jeffrey Kaye, Deniz Erten‐Lyons

2020Alzheimer s & Dementia Translational Research & Clinical Interventions29 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Cognitive screening is limited by clinician time and variability in administration and scoring. We therefore developed Self-Administered Tasks Uncovering Risk of Neurodegeneration (SATURN), a free, public-domain, self-administered, and automatically scored cognitive screening test, and validated it on inexpensive (<$100) computer tablets. METHODS: SATURN is a 30-point test including orientation, word recall, and math items adapted from the Saint Louis University Mental Status test, modified versions of the Stroop and Trails tasks, and other assessments of visuospatial function and memory. English-speaking neurology clinic patients and their partners 50 to 89 years of age were given SATURN, the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA), and a brief survey about test preferences. For patients recruited from dementia clinics (n = 23), clinical status was quantified with the Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) scale. Care partners (n = 37) were assigned CDR = 0. RESULTS: = -0.83 and -0.86, respectively). Statistically, neither test was superior. Most participants (83%) reported that SATURN was easy to use, and most either preferred SATURN over the MoCA (47%) or had no preference (32%). DISCUSSION: Performance on SATURN-a fully self-administered and freely available (https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.02v6wwpzr) cognitive screening test-is well-correlated with MoCA and CDR scores.

Topics & Concepts

Montreal Cognitive AssessmentSaturnClinical Dementia RatingTest (biology)CognitionPsychologyStroop effectCognitive testEffects of sleep deprivation on cognitive performanceMedicineClinical psychologyAudiologyPsychiatryCognitive impairmentAstrophysicsPhysicsBiologyPaleontologyPlanetDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchOlder Adults Driving StudiesIntensive Care Unit Cognitive Disorders