a Department of Psychiatry , University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center , Dallas , TX , USA.
b Department of Clinical Science , University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center , Dallas , TX , USA.
Clin Neuropsychol. 2018 Apr;32(3):524-529. doi: 10.1080/13854046.2017.1378371. Epub 2017 Oct 9.
Medical history information regarding prior traumatic brain injury (TBI) usually relies on self-report, although little is known about the reliability of this information with regard to injuries sustained years or decades earlier. Even less is known about the reliability of self-reported medical history information in older individuals with cognitive impairment. To this end, we assessed the test-retest reliability of self-reported TBI history in a large, national sample.
Participants (n = 4309) were older adults with intact cognition, mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer's disease (AD) from the National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center. Subjects provided TBI history information at baseline and one annual follow-up visit. Consistency of self-reported history of TBI with <5 minutes loss of consciousness (mLOC) and TBI with ≥5 mLOC reported at time 1 and 2 was analyzed across diagnostic groups.
Overall, subjects provided reports of TBI history at follow-up that were highly consistent with baseline reports (97.8-99.6% agreement), and Cohen's kappa coefficients were all larger than .80 and statistically significant, maximum p < .001. Furthermore, level of cognitive impairment was not a significant predictor of consistency in reporting.
These data are some of the first to suggest that self-report may be a consistent method of obtaining remote TBI history in the absence of medical records for older individuals, regardless of cognitive impairment.
既往创伤性脑损伤(TBI)的病史信息通常依赖于自我报告,尽管人们对多年甚至几十年前发生的损伤的此类信息的可靠性知之甚少。对于认知障碍的老年个体,自我报告的病史信息的可靠性则了解得更少。为此,我们评估了在一个大型全国性样本中自我报告 TBI 病史的测试-重测可靠性。
参与者(n=4309)为来自国家阿尔茨海默病协调中心的认知正常、轻度认知障碍(MCI)和阿尔茨海默病(AD)的老年人。受试者在基线和每年一次的随访就诊时提供 TBI 病史信息。分析了在 1 次和 2 次就诊时报告的 TBI 病史中无<5 分钟意识丧失(mLOC)和 TBI 病史与<5 mLOC 的一致性,分析跨越了诊断组。
总体而言,与基线报告相比,受试者在随访时提供的 TBI 病史报告具有高度一致性(97.8%-99.6%的一致性),且 Cohen's kappa 系数均大于.80,且具有统计学意义,最大 p<0.001。此外,认知障碍的严重程度并不是报告一致性的显著预测因素。
这些数据是首次表明,在没有医疗记录的情况下,对于认知障碍的老年个体,自我报告可能是获取遥远的 TBI 病史的一种可靠方法。