de Vries M, de Ruiter M A, Oostrom K J, Schouten-Van Meeteren A Y N, Maurice-Stam H, Oosterlaan J, Grootenhuis M A
a Research Priority Area Yield , University of Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands.
b University of Nottingham - Malaysia Campus, School of Psychology, Semenyih, Selangor, Malaysia.
Child Neuropsychol. 2018 Aug;24(6):844-858. doi: 10.1080/09297049.2017.1350262. Epub 2017 Jul 10.
Pediatric brain tumor survivors (PBTS) suffer from cognitive late effects, such as deteriorating executive functioning (EF). We explored the suitability of the Behavior Rating Inventory of Executive Function (BRIEF) to screen for these late effects. We assessed the relationship between the BRIEF and EF tasks, and between the BRIEF-Parent and BRIEF-Teacher, and we explored the clinical utility. Eighty-two PBTS (8-18 years) were assessed with EF tasks measuring attention, cognitive flexibility, inhibition, visual-, and working memory (WM), and with the BRIEF-Parent and BRIEF-Teacher. Pearson's correlations between the BRIEF and EF tasks, and between the BRIEF-Parent and BRIEF-Teacher were calculated. The BRIEF-Parent related poorly to EF tasks (rs < .26, ps > .01), but of the BRIEF-Teacher the WM-scale, Monitor-scale, Behavioral-Regulation-Index, and Meta-cognition-Index, and Total-score (rs > .31, ps < .01) related significantly to some EF tasks. When controlling for age, only the WM scale and Total score related significantly to the attention task (ps < .01). The inhibit scales of the BRIEF-Parent and BRIEF-Teacher correlated significantly (r = .33, p < .01). Children with clinically elevated scores on BRIEF scales that correlated with EF tasks performed worse on all EF tasks (ds 0.56-1.23, ps < .05). The BRIEF-Teacher Total and Index scores might better screen general EF in PBTS than the BRIEF-Parent. However, the BRIEF-Teacher is also not specific enough to capture separate EFs. Solely relying on the BRIEF as a screening measure of EFs in BPTS is insufficient. Questionnaires and tasks give distinctive, valuable information.
儿童脑肿瘤幸存者(PBTS)会遭受认知方面的晚期效应,例如执行功能(EF)逐渐恶化。我们探讨了执行功能行为评定量表(BRIEF)用于筛查这些晚期效应的适用性。我们评估了BRIEF与EF任务之间的关系,以及BRIEF家长版和教师版之间的关系,并探讨了其临床效用。对82名年龄在8至18岁的PBTS进行了EF任务评估,这些任务测量注意力、认知灵活性、抑制能力、视觉和工作记忆(WM),同时还使用了BRIEF家长版和教师版。计算了BRIEF与EF任务之间以及BRIEF家长版和教师版之间的皮尔逊相关性。BRIEF家长版与EF任务的相关性较差(rs <.26,ps >.01),但BRIEF教师版的WM量表、监控量表、行为调节指数、元认知指数和总分(rs >.31,ps <.01)与一些EF任务显著相关。在控制年龄后,只有WM量表和总分与注意力任务显著相关(ps <.01)。BRIEF家长版和教师版的抑制量表显著相关(r =.33,p <.01)。在与EF任务相关的BRIEF量表上临床得分升高的儿童在所有EF任务上表现更差(ds为0.56 - 1.23,ps <.05)。与BRIEF家长版相比,BRIEF教师版的总分和指数得分可能更适合筛查PBTS的一般EF。然而,BRIEF教师版也不够特异,无法捕捉单独的EF。仅依靠BRIEF作为BPTS中EF的筛查指标是不够的。问卷和任务能提供独特且有价值的信息。