Nelson Lindsay D, LaRoche Ashley A, Pfaller Adam Y, Lerner E Brooke, Hammeke Thomas A, Randolph Christopher, Barr William B, Guskiewicz Kevin, McCrea Michael A
1Medical College of Wisconsin,Milwaukee,Wisconsin.
3Loyola University Medical School,Maywood,Illinois.
J Int Neuropsychol Soc. 2016 Jan;22(1):24-37. doi: 10.1017/S1355617715001101.
Limited data exist comparing the performance of computerized neurocognitive tests (CNTs) for assessing sport-related concussion. We evaluated the reliability and validity of three CNTs-ANAM, Axon Sports/Cogstate Sport, and ImPACT-in a common sample. High school and collegiate athletes completed two CNTs each at baseline. Concussed (n=165) and matched non-injured control (n=166) subjects repeated testing within 24 hr and at 8, 15, and 45 days post-injury. Roughly a quarter of each CNT's indices had stability coefficients (M=198 day interval) over .70. Group differences in performance were mostly moderate to large at 24 hr and small by day 8. The sensitivity of reliable change indices (RCIs) was best at 24 hr (67.8%, 60.3%, and 47.6% with one or more significant RCIs for ImPACT, Axon, and ANAM, respectively) but diminished to near the false positive rates thereafter. Across time, the CNTs' sensitivities were highest in those athletes who became asymptomatic within 1 day before neurocognitive testing but was similar to the tests' false positive rates when including athletes who became asymptomatic several days earlier. Test-retest reliability was similar among these three CNTs and below optimal standards for clinical use on many subtests. Analyses of group effect sizes, discrimination, and sensitivity and specificity suggested that the CNTs may add incrementally (beyond symptom scores) to the identification of clinical impairment within 24 hr of injury or within a short time period after symptom resolution but do not add significant value over symptom assessment later. The rapid clinical recovery course from concussion and modest stability probably jointly contribute to limited signal detection capabilities of neurocognitive tests outside a brief post-injury window. (JINS, 2016, 22, 24-37).
关于用于评估运动相关脑震荡的计算机化神经认知测试(CNT)性能的比较数据有限。我们在一个共同样本中评估了三种CNT(ANAM、Axon Sports/Cogstate Sport和ImPACT)的可靠性和有效性。高中和大学运动员在基线时各自完成两项CNT测试。脑震荡患者(n = 165)和匹配的未受伤对照组(n = 166)在受伤后24小时内以及第8、15和45天重复进行测试。每种CNT指标中约四分之一的稳定性系数(平均间隔198天)超过0.70。在24小时时,各测试组间表现差异大多为中度到高度,到第8天时差异变小。可靠变化指数(RCI)的敏感性在24小时时最佳(ImPACT、Axon和ANAM分别有一个或多个显著RCI时的敏感性为67.8%、60.3%和47.6%),但此后降至接近假阳性率。随着时间推移,CNT的敏感性在神经认知测试前1天内无症状的运动员中最高,但当纳入几天前就已无症状的运动员时,其敏感性与测试的假阳性率相似。这三种CNT的重测信度相似,且在许多子测试中低于临床使用的最佳标准。对组效应量、辨别力、敏感性和特异性的分析表明,CNT可能在受伤后24小时内或症状缓解后的短时间内(除症状评分外)对临床损伤的识别有增量作用,但在症状评估之后并没有增加显著价值。脑震荡后快速的临床恢复过程和适度的稳定性可能共同导致神经认知测试在受伤后的短暂窗口之外信号检测能力有限。(《神经心理学杂志》,2016年,第22卷,第24 - 37页)