Consensus on Shared Measures of Mobility and Cognition: From the Canadian Consortium on Neurodegeneration in Aging (CCNA)

A new paradigm is emerging in which mobility and cognitive impairments, previously studied, diagnosed, and managed separately in older adults, are in fact regulated by shared brain resources. Deterioration in these shared brain mechanisms by normal aging and neurodegeneration increases the risk of d...

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Veröffentlicht in:The journals of gerontology. Series A, Biological sciences and medical sciences Biological sciences and medical sciences, 2019-05, Vol.74 (6), p.897-909
Hauptverfasser: Montero-Odasso, Manuel, Almeida, Quincy J, Bherer, Louis, Burhan, Amer M, Camicioli, Richard, Doyon, Julien, Fraser, Sarah, Muir-Hunter, Susan, Li, Karen Z H, Liu-Ambrose, Teresa, McIlroy, William, Middleton, Laura, Morais, José A, Sakurai, Ryota, Speechley, Mark, Vasudev, Akshya, Beauchet, Olivier, Hausdorff, Jeffrey M, Rosano, Caterina, Studenski, Stephanie, Verghese, Joe
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container_title The journals of gerontology. Series A, Biological sciences and medical sciences
container_volume 74
creator Montero-Odasso, Manuel
Almeida, Quincy J
Bherer, Louis
Burhan, Amer M
Camicioli, Richard
Doyon, Julien
Fraser, Sarah
Muir-Hunter, Susan
Li, Karen Z H
Liu-Ambrose, Teresa
McIlroy, William
Middleton, Laura
Morais, José A
Sakurai, Ryota
Speechley, Mark
Vasudev, Akshya
Beauchet, Olivier
Hausdorff, Jeffrey M
Rosano, Caterina
Studenski, Stephanie
Verghese, Joe
description A new paradigm is emerging in which mobility and cognitive impairments, previously studied, diagnosed, and managed separately in older adults, are in fact regulated by shared brain resources. Deterioration in these shared brain mechanisms by normal aging and neurodegeneration increases the risk of developing dementia, falls, and fractures. This new paradigm requires an integrated approach to measuring both domains. We aim to identify a complementary battery of existing tests of mobility and cognition in community-dwelling older adults that enable assessment of motor-cognitive interactions. Experts on mobility and cognition in aging participated in a semistructured consensus based on the Delphi process. After performing a scoping review to select candidate tests, multiple rounds of consultations provided structured feedback on tests that captured shared characteristics of mobility and cognition. These tests needed to be sensitive to changes in both mobility and cognition, applicable across research studies and clinics, sensitive to interventions, feasible to perform in older adults, been previously validated, and have minimal ceiling/floor effects. From 17 tests appraised, 10 tests fulfilled prespecified criteria and were selected as part of the "Core-battery" of tests. The expert panel also recommended a "Minimum-battery" of tests that included gait speed, dual-task gait speed, the Montreal Cognitive Assessment and Trail Making Test A&B. A standardized assessment battery that captures shared characteristics of mobility and cognition seen in aging and neurodegeneration may increase comparability across research studies, detection of subtle or common reversible factors, and accelerate research progress in dementia, falls, and aging-related disabilities.
doi_str_mv 10.1093/gerona/gly148
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source Oxford University Press Journals All Titles (1996-Current); MEDLINE; Alma/SFX Local Collection
subjects Aged
Aging
Canada
Cognition Disorders - diagnosis
Cognitive ability
Consensus
Delphi Technique
Dementia disorders
Female
Gait
Geriatric Assessment - methods
Humans
Male
Mobility
Mobility Limitation
Neurodegeneration
Neurodegenerative Diseases - diagnosis
Older people
Risk factors
Systematic review
The Journal of Gerontology: Medical Sciences
title Consensus on Shared Measures of Mobility and Cognition: From the Canadian Consortium on Neurodegeneration in Aging (CCNA)
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