Validation of the UK English Oxford cognitive screen-plus in sub-acute and chronic stroke survivors

Author:

Webb Sam S1ORCID,Hobden Georgina1,Roberts Rebecca12,Chiu Evangeline G1,King Sarah3,Demeyere Nele1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Experimental Psychology, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

2. The Oxford Institute of Clinical Psychology Training and Research, The Oxford Centre for Psychological Health, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK

3. Oxfordshire Stroke Rehabilitation Unit, Oxford Health NHS Foundation Trust, Abingdon, UK

Abstract

Introduction: Stroke survivors are routinely screened for cognitive impairment with tools that often fail to detect subtle impairments. The Oxford Cognitive Screen-Plus (OCS-Plus) is a brief tablet-based screen designed to detect subtle post-stroke cognitive impairments. We examined its psychometric properties in two UK English-speaking stroke cohorts (subacute: <3 months post-stroke, chronic: >6 months post-stroke) cross-sectionally. Patients and methods: This study included 347 stroke survivors (mean age = 73 years; mean education = 13 years; 43.06% female; 74.42% ischaemic stroke). The OCS-Plus was completed by 181 sub-acute stroke survivors and 166 chronic stroke survivors. All participants also completed the Oxford Cognitive Screen (OCS) and a subset completed the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) and further neuropsychological tests. Results: First, convergent construct validity of OCS-Plus tasks to task-matched standardized neuropsychological tests was confirmed ( r > 0.30). Second, we evaluated divergent construct validity of all OCS-Plus subtasks ( r < 0.19). Third, we report the sensitivity and specificity of each OCS-Plus subtask compared to neuropsychological test performance. Fourth, we found that OCS-Plus detected cognitive impairments in a large proportion of those classed as unimpaired on MoCA (100%) and OCS (98.50%). Discussion and conclusion: The OCS-Plus provides a valid screening tool for sensitive detection of subtle cognitive impairment in stroke patients. Indeed, the OCS-Plus detected subtle cognitive impairment at a similar level to validated neuropsychological assessments and exceeded detection of cognitive impairment compared to standard clinical screening tools.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine,Neurology (clinical)

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