The Influence of Cerebrovascular Pathology on Cluster Analysis of Neuropsychological Scores in Patients With Mild Cognitive Impairment

Author:

Romero Kristoffer1ORCID,Ladyka-Wojcik Natalia2,Heir Arjan3,Bellana Buddhika3,Leach Larry3,Proulx Guy B3

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychology, University of Windsor

2. Department of Psychology, University of Toronto

3. Department of Psychology, York University Glendon Campus

Abstract

Abstract Objectives The diagnostic entity of mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is heterogeneous, highlighting the need for data-driven classification approaches to identify patient subgroups. However, these approaches can be strongly determined by sample characteristics and selected measures. Here, we applied a cluster analysis to an MCI patient database from a neuropsychology clinic to determine whether the inclusion of patients with MCI with vascular pathology would result in a different classification of subgroups. Methods Participants diagnosed with MCI (n = 166), vascular cognitive impairment—no dementia (n = 26), and a group of older adults with subjective cognitive concerns but no objective impairment (n = 144) were assessed using a full neuropsychological battery and other clinical measures. Cognitive measures were analyzed using a hierarchical cluster analysis and then a k-means approach, with resulting clusters compared on a range of demographic and clinical variables. Results We found a 4-factor solution: a cognitively intact cluster, a globally impaired cluster, an amnestic/visuospatial impairment cluster, and a mild, mixed-domain cluster. Interestingly, group differences in self-reported multilingualism emerged in the derived clusters that were not observed when comparing diagnostic groups. Conclusions Our results were generally consistent with previous studies using cluster analysis in MCI. Including patients with primarily cerebrovascular disease resulted in subtle differences in the derived clusters and revealed new insights into shared cognitive profiles of patients beyond diagnostic categories. These profiles should be further explored to develop individualized assessment and treatment approaches.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Clinical Psychology,Neuropsychology and Physiological Psychology,General Medicine

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