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Trail Making Test Normative Data for the German Older Population

Michael Specka, Christian Weimar, Andreas Stang, Karl‐Heinz Jöckel, Norbert Scherbaum, Sarah Sanchez Hoffmann, Bernd Kowall, Martha Jokisch

2021Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology17 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We provide normative data for the Trail Making Test (TMT)-A and B and the derived scores B - A and B/A, for the German general population aged 57-84 years. METHODS: Data were derived from the third examination of the population-based Heinz Nixdorf Recall study. We excluded participants with a history of dementia or stroke, a depression score above cutoff (CES-D Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale score ≥ 18), or mild cognitive impairment according to a neurocognitive test battery. The normative sample (n = 2,182) was stratified by age, using the interval superposition approach, and by three levels of educational attainment (up to 10 years of schooling; >10 years of schooling; and university degree). RESULTS: We tabulated test performance scores at percentage rank thresholds 5, 10, 15, 20, 25, 50, 75, and 90. In multiple linear regression, TMT-A performance declined by 1 s each year of life, and TMT-B performance by 3 s; educational level had an impact of up to 30 s in TMT-B. TMT-B/A was only weakly associated with age and education. TMT-B and B - A correlated r = 0.96. Completion of the TMT-B within the time limit of 300 s was not achieved by 10.9% of participants >74 years, and especially by those >74 years who were on the lowest educational level (13.9%). CONCLUSIONS: For TMT-A, TMT-B, and B - A, the narrow age categorization and distinction between three educational levels proved meaningful. The 300 s limit for the TMT-B impedes the identification of thresholds for very low performance in this age group and needs reconsideration.

Topics & Concepts

PsychologyTrail Making TestPopulationNormativeDementiaDemographyGerontologyMedicineNeuropsychologyCognitionPsychiatryInternal medicinePhilosophyEpistemologyDiseaseSociologyDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchOlder Adults Driving StudiesTraumatic Brain Injury Research