Abstract

BackgroundIt is well known in Huntington's disease that cytosine‐adenine‐guanine expansion and age at study entry are predictive of the timing of motor diagnosis. The goal of this study was to assess whether additional motor, imaging, cognitive, functional, psychiatric, and demographic variables measured at study entry increased the ability to predict the risk of motor diagnosis over 12 years.MethodsOne thousand seventy‐eight Huntington's disease gene–expanded carriers (64% female) from the Neurobiological Predictors of Huntington's Disease study were followed up for up to 12 y (mean = 5, standard deviation = 3.3) covering 2002 to 2014. No one had a motor diagnosis at study entry, but 225 (21%) carriers prospectively received a motor diagnosis. Analysis was performed with random survival forests, which is a machine learning method for right‐censored data.ResultsAdding 34 variables along with cytosine‐adenine‐guanine and age substantially increased predictive accuracy relative to cytosine‐adenine‐guanine and age alone. Adding six of the common motor and cognitive variables (total motor score, diagnostic confidence level, Symbol Digit Modalities Test, three Stroop tests) resulted in lower predictive accuracy than the full set, but still had twice the 5‐y predictive accuracy than when using cytosine‐adenine‐guanine and age alone. Additional analysis suggested interactions and nonlinear effects that were characterized in a post hoc Cox regression model.ConclusionsMeasurement of clinical variables can substantially increase the accuracy of predicting motor diagnosis over and above cytosine‐adenine‐guanine and age (and their interaction). Estimated probabilities can be used to characterize progression level and aid in future studies' sample selection. © 2015 The Authors. Movement Disorders published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc. on behalf of International Parkinson and Movement Disorder Society

Highlights

  • The overarching goal of this study is to use the Neurobiological Predictors of Huntington’s Disease (PREDICTHD) study database to examine whether the accuracy in predicting the risk of motor diagnosis improves when motor, imaging, cognitive, functional, psychiatric, and demographic variables are considered in addition to CAG repeat length and age at study entry

  • The purpose of this study was to investigate whether variables other than CAG repeat length and age enhanced the prediction of HD motor diagnosis

  • Such prediction is important because it is the foundation for progression indexes often used to classify participants according to their progression level at study entry

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Summary

Objectives

The goal of this study was to assess whether additional motor, imaging, cognitive, functional, psychiatric, and demographic variables measured at study entry increased the ability to predict the risk of motor diagnosis over 12 years. The overarching goal of this study is to use the Neurobiological Predictors of Huntington’s Disease (PREDICTHD) study database to examine whether the accuracy in predicting the risk of motor diagnosis improves when motor, imaging, cognitive, functional, psychiatric, and demographic variables are considered in addition to CAG repeat length and age at study entry. The purpose of this study was to investigate whether variables other than CAG repeat length and age enhanced the prediction of HD motor diagnosis

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