Abstract
IntroductionThe search for biomarkers of cognitive impairment in Parkinson's disease is driven by the potential clinical applications in disease prognostication. Various eye tracking studies on cognitive functions in Parkinson's disease suggest a promising role of eye movement parameters as a biomarker for cognitive decline but the clinical utility has not been validated in longitudinal studies. The present study aims to investigate the longitudinal progression of eye fixation duration in a visual search task and its correlation with domain-specific cognitive impairment. MethodThis is a 2-year follow-up study on a group of non-demented Parkinson's disease patients, with baseline eye movement metrics and multi-domain cognitive functions measured, to assess the association between domain-specific cognitive impairment and progression of visual fixation duration. ResultsA total of 49 from the original 62 non-demented Parkinson's disease patients were re-examined at a 2-year follow-up. 15 cases (31%) were classified as having mild cognitive impairment. Visual fixation duration was significantly prolonged after 2 years. Using repeated measures ANOVA, impairment in semantic verbal fluency, visual and verbal recognition memory and orienting function of attention had a significant effect on prolonging visual fixation over time. ConclusionCorrelation between prolonged visual fixation and multiple domains of cognitive impairment related to cholinergic dysfunction in repeated measures over two years provides preliminary evidence for the eye tracking paradigm as a surrogate marker for cholinergic deficit in Parkinson's disease. The clinical utility in terms of disease prognostication is yet to be confirmed in prospective longitudinal studies with longer follow-up periods.
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