Nonmotor symptom burden grading as predictor of cognitive impairment in Parkinson’s disease
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Oikonomou, Panteleimon
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Nonmotor symptom burden grading as predictor of cognitive impairment in Parkinson’s disease
Author
- Oikonomou, Panteleimon;
- Van Wamelen, Daniel J.;
- Weintraub, Daniel;
- Aarsland, Dag;
- Ffytche, Dominic;
- Martínez Martin, Pablo;
- Rodríguez Blázquez, Carmen;
- Leta, Valentina;
- Borley, Corinne;
- Sportelli, Carolina;
- Trivedi, Dhaval;
- Podlewska, Aleksandra M.;
- Rukavina, Katarina;
- Rizos, Alexandra;
- Lazcano Ocampo, Claudia;
- Chaudhuri, Kallol Ray;
Abstract
Background: Identifying predictors of incident cognitive impairment (CI), one of the
most problematic long-term
outcomes, in Parkinson's disease (PD) is highly relevant
for personalized medicine and prognostic counseling. The Nonmotor Symptoms
Scale (NMSS) provides a global clinical assessment of a range of NMS, reflecting NMS
burden (NMSB), and thus may assist in the identification of an “at-risk”
CI group based
on overall NMSB cutoff scores.
Methods: To investigate whether specific patterns of PD NMS profiles predict incident
CI, we performed a retrospective longitudinal study on a convenience sample of
541 nondemented PD patients taking part in the Nonmotor Longitudinal International
Study (NILS) cohort, with Mini-Mental
State Examination (MMSE), NMSS, and Scales
for Outcomes in PD Motor Scale (SCOPA Motor) scores at baseline and last follow-up
(mean 3.2 years) being available.
Results: PD patients with incident CI (i.e., MMSE score ≤ 25) at last follow-up
(n = 107)
had severe overall NMSB level, significantly worse NMSS hallucinations/perceptual
problems and higher NMSS attention/memory scores at baseline. Patients with CI
also were older and with more advanced disease, but with no differences in disease
duration, dopamine replacement therapy, sex, and comorbid depression, anxiety, and
sleep disorders.
Conclusions: Our findings suggest that a comprehensive baseline measure of NMS
and in particular hallucinations and perceptual problems assessed with a validated
single instrument can be used to predict incident CI in PD. This approach provides a
simple, holistic strategy to predict future CI in this population.
Patrocinador
Albert-Ludwigs-Universitat Freiburg D637
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Brain and Behavior 2021;11:e02086.
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