Is the Montreal cognitive assessment culturally valid in a diverse geriatric primary care setting? Lessons from the Bronx

Author:

Stimmel Marnina B.1ORCID,Orkaby Ariela R.23,Ayers Emmeline1,Verghese Joe1,Nsubayi Celeste K.1,Weiss Erica F.1

Affiliation:

1. Departments of Neurology and Medicine Montefiore Medical Center and Albert Einstein College of Medicine Bronx New York USA

2. New England GRECC VA Boston Healthcare System Boston Massachusetts USA

3. Division of Aging, Brigham & Women's Hospital Harvard Medical School Boston Massachusetts USA

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundEfficacy and validity of the MoCA for cognitive screening in ethnoculturally and linguistically diverse settings is unclear. We sought to examine the utility and discriminative validity of the Spanish and English MoCA versions to identify cognitive impairment among diverse community‐dwelling older adults.MethodsParticipants aged ≥65 with cognitive concerns attending outpatient primary care in Bronx, NY, were recruited. MoCA and neuropsychological measures were administered in Spanish or English, and a neuropsychologist determined cognitive status (normal with subjective cognitive concerns [SCC], mild cognitive impairment [MCI], and dementia). One‐way ANOVA compared cognitive statuses. ROC analyses identified optimal MoCA cutpoints for discriminating possible cognitive impairment.ResultsThere were 231 participants, with mean age 73, 72% women, 43% Hispanic; 39% Black/African American; 113 (49%) completed testing in English and 118 (51%) in Spanish. Overall MoCA mean was 17.7 (SD = 4.3). Neuropsychological assessment identified 90 as cognitively normal/SCC, average MoCA 19.9 (SD = 4.1), 133 with MCI, average MoCA 16.6 (SD = 3.7), and 8 with dementia, average MoCA 10.6 (SD = 3.1). Mean English MoCA average was 18.6 (SD = 4.1) versus Spanish 16.7 (SD = 4.3). The published cutpoint ≤23 for MCI yielded a high false‐positive rate (79%). ROC analyses identified ≤18.5 as the score to identify MCI or dementia using the English MoCA (65% sensitivity; 77% specificity) and ≤16.5 for the Spanish MoCA (64% sensitivity;73% specificity) in this sample of older adults with cognitive concerns.ConclusionsCurrent MoCA cutpoints were inappropriately high in a culturally/linguistically diverse urban setting, leading to a high false‐positive rate. Lower Spanish and English MoCA cutpoints may improve diagnostic accuracy for identifying cognitive impairment in this group, highlighting the need for the creation and validation of accurate cognitive screeners for ethnoculturally and linguistically diverse older adults.

Funder

National Institute on Aging

Publisher

Wiley

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