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Validation of a digit symbol substitution test for use in supervised and unsupervised assessment in mild Alzheimer’s disease

Michael P. Williamson, Paul Maruff, Adrian Schembri, Hannah Cummins, Laura Bird, Emily Rosenich, Yen Ying Lim

2022Journal of Clinical and Experimental Neuropsychology23 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Introduction The Digit-Symbol-Substitution Test (DSST) is used widely in neuropsychological investigations of Alzheimer’s Disease (AD). A computerized version of this paradigm, the DSST-Meds, utilizes medicine-date pairings and has been developed for administration in both supervised and unsupervised environments. This study determined the utility and validity of the DSST-Meds for measuring cognitive dysfunction in early AD.Method Performance on the DSST-Meds was compared to performance on the WAIS Coding test, and a computerized digit symbol coding test (DSST-Symbols). The first study compared supervised performance on the three DSSTs versions in cognitively unimpaired (CU) adults (n = 104). The second compared supervised DSST performance between CU (n = 60) and mild-symptomatic AD (mild-AD, n = 79) groups. The third study compared performance on the DSST-Meds between unsupervised (n= 621) and supervised settings.Results In Study 1, DSST-Meds accuracy showed high correlations with the DSST-Symbols accuracy (r = 0.81) and WAIS-Coding accuracy (r = 0.68). In Study 2, when compared to CU adults, the mild-AD group showed lower accuracy on all three DSSTs (Cohen’s d ranging between 1.39 and 2.56) and DSST-Meds accuracy was correlated moderately with Mini-Mental State Examination scores (r = 0.44, p < .001). Study 3 observed no difference in DSST-meds accuracy between supervised and unsupervised administrations.Conclusion The DSST-Meds showed good construct and criterion validity when used in both supervised and unsupervised contexts and provided a strong foundation to investigate the utility of the DSST in groups with low familiarity to neuropsychological assessment.

Topics & Concepts

Digit symbol substitution testCoding (social sciences)Wechsler Adult Intelligence ScalePsychologyCognitionMathematicsStatisticsPsychiatryMedicinePathologyPlaceboAlternative medicineDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchTraumatic Brain Injury ResearchAlzheimer's disease research and treatments
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