Author:
Georgiou Eleni-Zacharoula,Skondra Maria,Charalampopoulou Marina,Felemegkas Panagiotis,Pachi Asimina,Stafylidou Georgia,Papazachariou Dimitrios,Perneczky Robert,Thomopoulos Vasileios,Politis Antonios,Leroi Iracema,Economou Polychronis,Alexopoulos Panagiotis
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Detecting impaired naming capacity contributes to the detection of mild (MildND) and major (MajorND) neurocognitive disorder due to Alzheimer’s disease (AD). The Test for Finding Word retrieval deficits (WoFi) is a new, 50-item, auditory stimuli-based instrument.
Objective
The study aimed to adapt WoFi to the Greek language, to develop a short version of WoFi (WoFi-brief), to compare the item frequency and the utility of both instruments with the naming subtest of the widely used Addenbrooke’s cognitive examination III (ACEIIINaming) in detecting MildND and MajorND due to AD.
Methods
This cross-sectional, validation study included 99 individuals without neurocognitive disorder, as well as 114 and 49 patients with MildND and MajorND due to AD, respectively. The analyses included categorical principal components analysis using Cramer’s V, assessment of the frequency of test items based on corpora of television subtitles, comparison analyses, Kernel Fisher discriminant analysis models, proportional odds logistic regression (POLR) models and stratified repeated random subsampling used to recursive partitioning to training and validation set (70/30 ratio).
Results
WoFi and WoFi-brief, which consists of 16 items, have comparable item frequency and utility and outperform ACEIIINaming. According to the results of the discriminant analysis, the misclassification error was 30.9%, 33.6% and 42.4% for WoFi, WoFi-brief and ACEIIINaming, respectively. In the validation regression model including WoFi the mean misclassification error was 33%, while in those including WoFi-brief and ACEIIINaming it was 31% and 34%, respectively.
Conclusions
WoFi and WoFi-brief are more effective in detecting MildND and MajorND due to AD than ACEIIINaming.
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
Geriatrics and Gerontology,Health (social science)
Cited by
1 articles.
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