Cognitive Dispersion and Its Functional Relevance in Behavioral Variant Frontotemporal Dementia and Prodromal Behavioral Variant Frontotemporal Dementia

Objective: Executive dysfunction is characteristic of behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) but can be challenging to detect. Dispersion-based intraindividual variability (IIV-d) is hypothesized to reflect a sensitive index of executive dysfunction and has demonstrated relevance to func...

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Veröffentlicht in:Neuropsychology 2024-10, Vol.38 (7), p.637-652
Hauptverfasser: Webber, Troy A., Woods, Steven P., Lorkiewicz, Sara A., Yazbeck, Holley W., Schultz, Elaine R., Kiselica, Andrew M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Objective: Executive dysfunction is characteristic of behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD) but can be challenging to detect. Dispersion-based intraindividual variability (IIV-d) is hypothesized to reflect a sensitive index of executive dysfunction and has demonstrated relevance to functional decline but has not been evaluated in bvFTD. Method: We report on 477 demographically matched participants (159 cognitively healthy [CH], 159 clinical Alzheimer's disease [AD], 159 clinical bvFTD/prodromal bvFTD) who completed the Uniform Data Set 3.0 Neuropsychological Battery. IIV-d was measured using the coefficient of variance (CoV; raw and demographically adjusted) across 12 Uniform Data Set 3.0 Neuropsychological Battery indicators and the informant-rated Functional Activities Questionnaire assessed daily functioning. Results: Analysis of covariance showed that participants in the bvFTD/prodromal bvFTD group exhibited higher raw and demographically adjusted CoV compared to CH participants, at a very large effect size (d = 1.28-1.47). Demographically adjusted (but not raw) CoV was lower in the bvFTD/prodromal bvFTD group than the AD group, though the effect size was small (d = .38). Both CoV metrics accurately differentiated the bvFTD/prodromal bvFTD and CH groups (areas under the curve = .84), but not bvFTD/prodromal bvFTD and AD groups (areas under the curve = .59). Regression analyses in the bvFTD/prodromal bvFTD group indicated that higher IIV-d on both metrics was associated with greater daily functioning impairment, over and above covariates. Conclusions: Compared to healthy adults, individuals with bvFTD/prodromal bvFTD show greater levels of performance variability across a battery of neuropsychological measures, which interferes with everyday functioning. These data demonstrate the clinical utility and ecological validity of IIV-d in bvFTD/prodromal bvFTD, though these findings should be replicated in more diverse samples. Key Points Question: Is variability within a neurocognitive test battery elevated in individuals with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia/prodromal behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia, and is it associated with functional decline in those individuals? Findings: Variability within a neurocognitive test battery is elevated in individuals with behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia/prodromal behavioral variant frontotemporal dementia relative to cognitively healthy adults and is associated with greater impai
ISSN:0894-4105
1931-1559
1931-1559
DOI:10.1037/neu0000969