Obermeit Lisa C, Beltran Jessica, Casaletto Kaitlin B, Franklin Donald R, Letendre Scott, Ellis Ronald, Fennema-Notestine Christine, Vaida Florin, Collier Ann C, Marra Christina M, Clifford David, Gelman Benjamin, Sacktor Ned, Morgello Susan, Simpson David, McCutchan J Allen, Grant Igor, Heaton Robert K
Department of Psychiatry, University of California, San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla, San Diego, CA, 92093, USA.
SDSU/UCSD Joint Doctoral Program in Clinical Psychology, San Diego, CA, USA.
J Neurovirol. 2017 Feb;23(1):67-78. doi: 10.1007/s13365-016-0474-z. Epub 2016 Aug 24.
The criteria for differentiating symptomatic from asymptomatic HIV-associated neurocognitive disorder require evaluation of (1) cognitive impairment, (2) daily functioning declines, and (3) whether the functional declines are attributable to cognitive versus physical problems. Many providers rely only on self-report to evaluate these latter criteria. However, the accuracy of patient-provided information may be limited. This study evaluated the validity of self-assessment for HIV-associated neurocognitive disorder (HAND) diagnoses by comparing objective findings with self-report of criteria 2 and 3 above. Self-reports were used to stratify 277 cognitively impaired HIV+ individuals into functionally dependent (n = 159) and independent (n = 118) groups, followed by group comparisons of objective functional problems. The dependent group was then divided into those who self-attributed their functional dependence to only cognitive (n = 80) versus only physical (n = 79) causes, for further comparisons on objective findings. The functionally dependent group was significantly worse than the independent group on all objective disability characteristics except severity of cognitive impairment, while those who attributed their dependence to physical (versus cognitive) factors were similar on all objective physical, cognitive, and functioning variables. Of note, 28 % of physical attributors showed no physical abnormalities on neuromedical examinations. Results suggest that patient report is consistently associated with objective measures of functional loss; in contrast, patient identification of physical versus cognitive causes is poorly associated with objective criteria. These findings caution against relying solely on patient self-report to determine whether functional disability in cognitively impaired HIV+ individuals can be attributed to strictly physical causes.
区分有症状与无症状的HIV相关神经认知障碍的标准需要评估以下几个方面:(1)认知障碍;(2)日常功能下降;(3)功能下降是否归因于认知问题还是身体问题。许多医疗服务提供者仅依靠自我报告来评估后两个标准。然而,患者提供信息的准确性可能有限。本研究通过将客观结果与上述标准2和3的自我报告进行比较,评估了HIV相关神经认知障碍(HAND)诊断中自我评估的有效性。自我报告被用于将277名认知受损的HIV阳性个体分为功能依赖组(n = 159)和独立组(n = 118),随后对客观功能问题进行组间比较。然后,将依赖组分为那些将其功能依赖仅归因于认知(n = 80)与仅归因于身体(n = 79)原因的个体,以便对客观结果进行进一步比较。在除认知障碍严重程度外的所有客观残疾特征方面,功能依赖组明显比独立组差,而那些将其依赖归因于身体(而非认知)因素的个体在所有客观身体、认知和功能变量方面相似。值得注意的是,28%将功能依赖归因于身体因素的个体在神经医学检查中未显示身体异常。结果表明,患者报告与功能丧失的客观测量结果始终相关;相比之下,患者对身体与认知原因的识别与客观标准的相关性较差。这些发现提醒我们,不要仅依靠患者自我报告来确定认知受损的HIV阳性个体的功能残疾是否可严格归因于身体原因。