Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThere has been a rise in remote cognitive testing for neurodegenerative diseases. The ALLFTD Mobile App is designed to capture clinical features of frontotemporal dementia (FTD) through repeated remote assessment on smartphones. This is a departure from traditional neuropsychological practice in which a single examiner‐led assessment occurs in a controlled setting. When participants complete tasks on their own, those with greater disease severity may be more variable in their performance for a variety of reasons (e.g. greater distractibility, less engagement). Here we study whether intraindividual cognitive variability (IIV) is associated with older age and increasing disease severity.MethodParticipants were 279 (mean age = 54.9) healthy controls and participants with sporadic FTD or from familial FTD kindreds with a range of disease severities based on FTLD Clinical Dementia Rating scale (CDR®+NACC‐FTLD Global) scores: 0 (n = 132), 0.5 (n = 54), and ≥1 (n = 47). Participants completed three cognitive tasks at least two times across twelve days. Measures included an adaptive memory task and gamified versions of Flanker and Go/no‐go tasks. IIV was operationalized as the standard deviation in performance on each task. Regression analyses investigated the relationship of IIV with CDR®+NACC‐FTLD group, and with age in those without symptoms. Education and gender were included as covariates in all analyses.ResultGreater disease severity (CDR®+NACC‐FTLD) was associated with greater variability on Flanker (p<.001) and Go/No‐go (p = .02) tasks; a positive but non‐significant association was seen with memory testing (p = .16). Post‐hoc comparisons found that those with CDR®+NACC‐FTLD of 0.5 had significantly more IIV on the Flanker task (𝛃 = .39, p = .004) than those with CDR®+NACC‐FTLD’s of 0. Moreover, those with a CDR®+NACC‐FTLD ≥1 had significantly greater IIV on the Flanker (𝛃 = .85, p<.001) and Go/No‐go tasks (𝛃 = .51, p = .007) than those with a CDR®+NACC‐FTLD of 0. In those without symptoms (CDR®+NACC‐FTLD = 0), age was associated with increased IIV on the Flanker (𝛃 = .27, p<.001) and Go/no‐go (𝛃 = .23, p<.001) tasks.ConclusionIncreased IIV, particularly on processing speed/executive functioning tasks, was associated with greater age and greater functional impairment, even in the mildest stages. Future investigations exploring predictors of IIV and the prognostic value of IIV are warranted.

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