Litcius/Paper detail

Accuracy of Telephone-Based Cognitive Screening Tests: Systematic Review and Meta-Analysis

Emma Elliott, Claire Green, David J. Llewellyn, Terence J. Quinn

2020Current Alzheimer Research38 citationsDOI

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Telephone-based cognitive assessments may be preferable to in-person testing in terms of test burden, economic and opportunity cost. OBJECTIVE: We sought to determine the accuracy of telephone-based screening for the identification of dementia or Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI). METHODS: Five multidisciplinary databases were searched. Two researchers independently screened articles and extracted data. Eligible studies compared any multi-domain telephone-based assessment of cognition to the face-to-face diagnostic evaluation. Where data allowed, we pooled test accuracy metrics using the bivariate approach. RESULTS: From 11,732 titles, 34 papers were included, describing 15 different tests. There was variation in test scoring and quality of included studies. Pooled analyses of accuracy for dementia: Telephone Interview for Cognitive Status (TICS) (<31/41) sensitivity: 0.92, specificity: 0.66 (6 studies); TICSmodified (<28/50) sensitivity: 0.91, specificity: 0.91 (3 studies). For MCI: TICS-modified (<33/50) sensitivity: 0.82, specificity: 0.87 (3 studies); Telephone-Montreal Cognitive Assessment (<18/22) sensitivity: 0.98, specificity: 0.69 (2 studies). CONCLUSION: There is limited diagnostic accuracy evidence for the many telephonic cognitive screens that exist. The TICS and TICS-m have the greatest supporting evidence; their test accuracy profiles make them suitable as initial cognitive screens where face to face assessment is not possible.

Topics & Concepts

Meta-analysisCognitionPsychologyMedicinePsychiatryInternal medicineDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchIntensive Care Unit Cognitive DisordersOlder Adults Driving Studies