TY - JOUR
T1 - Intra-individual variability in prodromal Huntington disease and its relationship to genetic burden
AU - PREDICT-HD Investigators of the Huntington Study Group
AU - Musso, Mandi
AU - Westervelt, Holly James
AU - Long, Jeffrey D.
AU - Morgan, Erin
AU - Woods, Steven Paul
AU - Smith, Megan M.
AU - Lu, Wenjing
AU - Paulsen, Jane S.
AU - Cross, Stephen
AU - Ryan, Patricia
AU - Epping, Eric A.
AU - Chiu, Edmond
AU - Preston, Joy
AU - Goh, Anita
AU - Antonopoulos, Stephanie
AU - Loi, Samantha
AU - Chua, Phyllis
AU - Komiti, Angela
AU - Raymond, Lynn
AU - Decolongon, Joji
AU - Fan, Mannie
AU - Coleman, Allison
AU - Ross, Christopher A.
AU - Varvaris, Mark
AU - Yoritomo, Nadine
AU - Mallonee, William M.
AU - Suter, Greg
AU - Samii, Ali
AU - Macaraeg, Alma
AU - Jones, Randi
AU - Wood-Siverio, Cathy
AU - Factor, Stewart A.
AU - Barker, Roger A.
AU - Mason, Sarah
AU - Guzman, Natalie Valle
AU - McCusker, Elizabeth
AU - Griffith, Jane
AU - Loy, Clement
AU - Gunn, David
AU - Orth, Michael
AU - Süßmuth, Sigurd
AU - Barth, Katrin
AU - Trautmann, Sonja
AU - Schwenk, Daniela
AU - Eschenbach, Carolin
AU - Quaid, Kimberly
AU - Wesson, Melissa
AU - Perlmutter, Joel
AU - Mazzoni, Pietro
AU - Hershey, Tamara
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© INS. The International Neuropsychological Society 2015.
PY - 2015/11/12
Y1 - 2015/11/12
N2 - The current study sought to examine the utility of intra-individual variability (IIV) in distinguishing participants with prodromal Huntington disease (HD) from nongene-expanded controls. IIV across 15 neuropsychological tasks and within-task IIV using a self-paced timing task were compared as a single measure of processing speed (Symbol Digit Modalities Test [SDMT]) in 693 gene-expanded and 191 nongene-expanded participants from the PREDICT-HD study. After adjusting for depressive symptoms and motor functioning, individuals estimated to be closest to HD diagnosis displayed higher levels of across- and within-task variability when compared to controls and those prodromal HD participants far from disease onset (FICV(3,877) = 11.25; p<.0001; FPacedTiming(3,877) = 22.89; p<.0001). When prodromal HD participants closest to HD diagnosis were compared to controls, Cohen's d effect sizes were larger in magnitude for the within-task variability measure, paced timing (-1.01), and the SDMT (-0.79) and paced tapping coefficient of variation (CV) (-0.79) compared to the measures of across-task variability [CV (0.55); intra-individual standard deviation (0.26)]. Across-task variability may be a sensitive marker of cognitive decline in individuals with prodromal HD approaching disease onset. However, individual neuropsychological tasks, including a measure of within-task variability, produced larger effect sizes than an index of across-task IIV in this sample.
AB - The current study sought to examine the utility of intra-individual variability (IIV) in distinguishing participants with prodromal Huntington disease (HD) from nongene-expanded controls. IIV across 15 neuropsychological tasks and within-task IIV using a self-paced timing task were compared as a single measure of processing speed (Symbol Digit Modalities Test [SDMT]) in 693 gene-expanded and 191 nongene-expanded participants from the PREDICT-HD study. After adjusting for depressive symptoms and motor functioning, individuals estimated to be closest to HD diagnosis displayed higher levels of across- and within-task variability when compared to controls and those prodromal HD participants far from disease onset (FICV(3,877) = 11.25; p<.0001; FPacedTiming(3,877) = 22.89; p<.0001). When prodromal HD participants closest to HD diagnosis were compared to controls, Cohen's d effect sizes were larger in magnitude for the within-task variability measure, paced timing (-1.01), and the SDMT (-0.79) and paced tapping coefficient of variation (CV) (-0.79) compared to the measures of across-task variability [CV (0.55); intra-individual standard deviation (0.26)]. Across-task variability may be a sensitive marker of cognitive decline in individuals with prodromal HD approaching disease onset. However, individual neuropsychological tasks, including a measure of within-task variability, produced larger effect sizes than an index of across-task IIV in this sample.
KW - Adult
KW - Attention
KW - Cognition disorders/diagnosis
KW - Cognition disorders/genetics
KW - Executive function
KW - Huntington disease
KW - Intra-individual variability
KW - Neuropsychological tests
KW - Prodromal symptoms
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=84928013791&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1017/S1355617714001076
DO - 10.1017/S1355617714001076
M3 - Article
C2 - 26304055
AN - SCOPUS:84928013791
SN - 1355-6177
VL - 21
SP - 8
EP - 21
JO - Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society
JF - Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society
IS - 1
ER -