Radomski Mary V, Davidson Leslie F, Smith Laurel, Finkelstein Marsha, Cecchini Amy, Heaton Kristin J, McCulloch Karen, Scherer Matthew, Weightman Margaret M
Courage Kenny Research Center, 800 E. 28th Street at Chicago, Minneapolis, MN.
Clinical Research and Leadership - School of Medicine and Health Sciences, George Washington University, 2100 Pennsylvania Suite 358 Avenue, Washington DC.
Mil Med. 2018 Jul 1;183(7-8):e214-e222. doi: 10.1093/milmed/usx045.
Determining duty-readiness after mild traumatic brain injury (mTBI) remains a priority of the United States Department of Defense as warfighters in both deployed and non-deployed settings continue to sustain these injuries in relatively large numbers. Warfighters with mTBI may experience unresolved sensorimotor, emotional, cognitive sequelae including problems with executive functions, a category of higher order cognitive processes that enable people to regulate goal-directed behavior. Persistent mTBI sequelae interfere with warfighters' proficiency in performing military duties and signal the need for graded return to activity and possibly rehabilitative services. Although significant strides have been carried out in recent years to enhance the identification and management of mTBI in garrison (EXORD 165-13) and deployed settings (EXORD 242-11; DoDI 6,490.11), the Department of Defense still lacks reliable, valid, and clinically feasible functional assessments to help inform duty-readiness decisions. Traditional functional assessments lack face validity for warfighters and may have ceiling effects, especially as related to executive functions. Performance-based multitasking assessments have been shown to be sensitive to executive dysfunction after acquired brain injury but no multitasking assessments have been validated in adults with mTBI. Existing multitasking assessments are not ecologically valid relative to military contexts. A multidisciplinary military-civilian team of researchers developed and evaluated a performance-based assessment called the Assessment of Military Multitasking Performance. One of the Assessment of Military Multitasking Performance multitasks, the Charge of Quarters Duty Test (CQDT), was designed to challenge the divided attention, foresight, and planning dimensions of executive functions. Here, we report on the preliminary validation results of the CQDT.
The team conducted a measurement development study at Fort Bragg, NC, enrolling 83 service members (33 with mTBI and 50 healthy controls). Discriminant validity was evaluated by comparing differences in CQDT sub-scores of warfighters with mTBI and healthy controls. Associations between CQDT sub-scores and neurocognitive measures known to be sensitive to mTBI were examined to explore convergent validity. The study was approved by the Womack Army Medical Center Institutional Review Board (Fort Bragg).
There were significant between-group differences in two of the four CQDT sub-scores (number of visits, p = 0.012; and performance accuracy, p = 0.020). Correlations between the CQDT sub-scores and some neurocognitive measures were statistically significant but weak, ranging from 0.287 (CQDT performance accuracy and NAB Numbers and Letters, Part D) to -0.421 (CQDT total number of visits and Automated Neuropsychological Assessment Metrics Tower Task). There were group differences in terms of participants' reading level, education, years in military, and stress symptoms; some of these characteristics may have influenced CQDT performance.
The CQDT demonstrated initial evidence of discriminant validity. Further study is warranted to more formally evaluate convergent/divergent validity and ultimately how and whether this performance-based multitasking measure can inform readiness to return to duty after mTBI.
确定轻度创伤性脑损伤(mTBI)后的战备状态仍然是美国国防部的一项优先任务,因为无论是在部署还是非部署环境中,作战人员仍有相当数量的人持续遭受此类损伤。患有mTBI的作战人员可能会经历未解决的感觉运动、情绪、认知后遗症,包括执行功能方面的问题,执行功能是一类高阶认知过程,使人们能够调节目标导向行为。持续性mTBI后遗症会干扰作战人员履行军事职责的能力,并表明需要逐步恢复活动,可能还需要康复服务。尽管近年来在加强驻军环境(EXORD 165 - 13)和部署环境(EXORD 242 - 11;DoDI 6,490.11)中mTBI的识别和管理方面取得了重大进展,但国防部仍然缺乏可靠、有效且临床可行的功能评估,以帮助做出战备状态决策。传统功能评估对作战人员缺乏表面效度,并且可能存在天花板效应,尤其是与执行功能相关的方面。基于表现的多任务评估已被证明对后天性脑损伤后的执行功能障碍敏感,但尚未在患有mTBI的成年人中进行多任务评估的验证。相对于军事背景,现有的多任务评估在生态效度方面不足。一个由军事和 civilian 组成的多学科研究团队开发并评估了一种基于表现的评估方法,称为军事多任务表现评估。军事多任务表现评估中的一项多任务,即值勤班长职责测试(CQDT),旨在挑战执行功能的注意力分散、前瞻性和规划维度。在此,我们报告 CQDT 的初步验证结果。
该团队在北卡罗来纳州布拉格堡进行了一项测量开发研究,招募了83名军人(33名患有mTBI,50名健康对照)。通过比较患有mTBI的作战人员和健康对照的CQDT子分数差异来评估区分效度。研究了CQDT子分数与已知对mTBI敏感的神经认知测量之间的关联,以探索聚合效度。该研究得到了沃马克陆军医疗中心机构审查委员会(布拉格堡)的批准。
四个CQDT子分数中的两个存在显著的组间差异(访问次数,p = 0.012;表现准确性,p = 0.020)。CQDT子分数与一些神经认知测量之间的相关性具有统计学意义,但较弱,范围从0.287(CQDT表现准确性与NAB数字和字母,D部分)到 - 0.421(CQDT访问总次数与自动神经心理评估指标塔楼任务)。参与者的阅读水平、教育程度、服役年限和压力症状存在组间差异;其中一些特征可能影响了CQDT表现。
CQDT展示了区分效度的初步证据。有必要进行进一步研究,以更正式地评估聚合/区分效度,并最终评估这种基于表现的多任务测量方法如何以及是否能够为mTBI后重返岗位的准备情况提供信息。