Abstract

AbstractBackgroundIt is well known that mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is associated with subtle functional decline. However, standardized and cost‐effective methods for the objective quantification of mild functional difficulties are lacking. Here we report preliminary validity data for a novel, non‐immersive virtual‐reality task (Virtual Kitchen Challenge [VKC]) against brain markers of cerebrovascular disease and in contrast to a conventional, self‐report measure of function.MethodTwenty (n = 14 healthy control, n = 6 MCI) community‐dwelling older adults aged 60+ completed neuropsychological testing, including the Functional Activities Questionnaire (FAQ), and the VKC, which requires completion of simulated breakfast and lunch tasks on a touch‐screen computer. White matter hyperintensity (WMH) volumes from Fluid Attenuation Inversion Recovery (FLAIR) MRI sequences were derived using the UBO detector, a cluster‐based WMH extraction pipeline based on k‐nearest neighbors (k‐NN) algorithm. WMH volumes were calculated in SPM’s DARTEL space, precluding the need to adjust for intracranial volume (ICV).ResultMCI participants reported significantly more functional difficulties than healthy controls (FAQ U = 76.50 p = .002) and obtained marginally slower completion times on the VKC (U = 60.00, p = .138). VKC completion time was moderately associated with age (r = .441, p = .059) but relations with sex, race, and IQ were weak and not significant (all rs<.195). VKC completion time significantly and strongly correlated with all WMH measures, even after controlling for age, sex, race, and IQ (total WMH r = .649, p = .031; deep WMH r = .615, p = .044; periventricular WMH r = .623, p = .041). By contrast, FAQ was not associated with WMH (rs<.2, p>.05 for all) or VKC completion time (r<.1, p>05) after controlling for age, sex, race, and IQ.ConclusionOur naturalistic, performance‐based measure of function (VKC) was not associated with race, sex, or premorbid IQ, but was strongly associated with neuroimaging markers of cerebrovascular disease (WMH). By contrast, a conventional self‐report measure of everyday functioning (FAQ) was not associated with neuroimaging measures (WMH). These results offer preliminary support for the VKC as a valid measure of early, subtle functional difficulties associated with cerebrovascular pathology that is not vulnerable to bias associated with race, sex, or premorbid IQ.

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