Stability of neuropsychological test performance in older adults serving as normative controls for a study on postoperative cognitive dysfunction

Author:

Feinkohl InsaORCID,Borchers Friedrich,Burkhardt Sarah,Krampe Henning,Kraft Antje,Speidel Saya,Kant Ilse M. J.,van Montfort Simone J. T.,Aarts Ellen,Kruppa Jochen,Slooter Arjen,Winterer Georg,Pischon Tobias,Spies Claudia

Abstract

Abstract Objective Studies of postoperative cognitive dysfunction (POCD) rely on repeat neuropsychological testing. The stability of the applied instruments, which are affected by natural variability in performance and measurement imprecision, is often unclear. We determined the stability of a neuropsychological test battery using a sample of older adults from the general population. Forty-five participants aged 65 to 89 years performed six computerized and non-computerized neuropsychological tests at baseline and again at 7 day and 3 months follow-up sessions. Mean scores on each test were compared across time points using repeated measures analyses of variance (ANOVA) with pairwise comparison. Two-way mixed effects, absolute agreement analyses of variance intra-class correlation coefficients (ICC) determined test–retest reliability. Results All tests had moderate to excellent test–retest reliability during 7-day (ICC range 0.63 to 0.94; all p < 0.01) and 3-month intervals (ICC range 0.60 to 0.92; all p < 0.01) though confidence intervals of ICC estimates were large throughout. Practice effects apparent at 7 days eased off by 3 months. No substantial differences between computerized and non-computerized tests were observed. We conclude that the present six-test neuropsychological test battery is appropriate for use in POCD research though small sample size of our study needs to be recognized as a limitation. Trial registration ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier NCT02265263 (15th October 2014)

Funder

Seventh Framework Programme

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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