Litcius/Paper detail

Longitudinal association of intraindividual variability with cognitive decline and dementia: A meta-analysis.

Rachael Mumme, Maria Pushpanathan, Sara Donaldson, Michael Weinborn, Stephanie R. Rainey‐Smith, Paul Maruff, Romola S. Bucks

2021Neuropsychology30 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Intraindividual variability (IIV)-variance in an individual's cognitive performance-may be associated with subsequent cognitive decline and/or conversion to dementia in older adults. This novel measure of cognition encompasses two main operationalizations: inconsistency (IIV-I) and dispersion (IIV-D), referring to variance within or across tasks, respectively. Each operationalization can also be measured with or without covariates. This meta-analytic study explores the association between IIV and subsequent cognitive outcomes regardless of operational definition and measurement approach. METHOD: = 13) that have examined IIV in association with later cognitive decline and/or conversation to MCI/dementia were analyzed. The effect of IIV operationalization was explored. Additional subgroup analysis of measurement approaches could not be examined due to the limited number of appropriate studies available for inclusion. RESULTS: = .065). CONCLUSION: Cognitive IIV, including both IIV-I and IIV-D operationalizations, appears to be associated with subsequent cognitive decline and/or dementia and may offer a novel indicator of incipient dementia in both clinical and research settings. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).

Topics & Concepts

DementiaCognitive declinePsycINFOOperationalizationMeta-analysisCognitionPsychologyGeeLongitudinal studyClinical psychologyGerontologyMedicinePsychiatryMEDLINEDiseaseStatisticsInternal medicineGeneralized estimating equationPolitical scienceEpistemologyMathematicsPathologyLawPhilosophyDementia and Cognitive Impairment ResearchCognitive Functions and MemoryOlder Adults Driving Studies