Abstract

Tests requiring the pronunciation of irregular words are used to estimate premorbid cognitive ability in patients with clinical diagnoses, and prior cognitive ability in normal ageing. However, scores on these word-reading tests correlate with scores on the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), a widely used screening test for possible cognitive pathology. This study aimed to test whether the word-reading tests' correlations with MMSE scores in healthy older people are explained by childhood IQ or education. Wechsler Test of Adult Reading (WTAR), National Adult Reading Test (NART), MMSE scores and information about education were obtained from 1024 70-year-olds, for whom childhood intelligence test scores were available. WTAR and NART were positively correlated with the MMSE (r ≈ 0.40, p < 0.001). The shared variance of WTAR and NART with MMSE was significantly attenuated by ~70% after controlling for childhood intelligence test scores. Education explained little additional variance in the association between the reading tests and the MMSE. MMSE, which is often used to index cognitive impairment, is associated with prior cognitive ability. MMSE score is related to scores on WTAR and NART largely due to their shared association with prior ability. Obtained MMSE scores should be interpreted in the context of prior ability (or WTAR/NART score as its proxy).

Highlights

  • Estimating a person’s peak prior level of cognitive functioning is useful in clinical and research settings

  • The present study aimed to investigate whether the Wechsler Test of Adult Reading (WTAR) is related to Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) score, independently of actual prior cognitive ability

  • The high positive correlation between WTAR and National Adult Reading Test (NART) and between the reading tests and age 11 IQ were reported previously on a subsample of the Lothian Birth Cohort 1936 (LBC1936) who attended two waves of testing (Dykiert & Deary, 2013) and they are near-identical to the ones found here

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Summary

Introduction

Estimating a person’s peak prior level of cognitive functioning is useful in clinical and research settings. Estimated peak prior cognitive level can provide a baseline from which to assess the severity of cognitive impairment following brain trauma, psychiatric or neurological disorder, or the degree of cognitive decline associated with non-pathological ageing. The validity of this method would be compromised if the premorbid ability tests were sensitive to the degree of cognitive impairment, which has been mooted in the literature (e.g. O’Carroll et al 1995; McFarlane et al 2006). Tests requiring the pronunciation of irregular words are used to estimate premorbid cognitive ability in patients with clinical diagnoses, and prior cognitive ability in normal ageing. Scores on these word-reading tests correlate with scores on the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), a widely used screening test for possible cognitive pathology. This study aimed to test whether the word-reading tests’ correlations with MMSE scores in healthy older people are explained by childhood IQ or education

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