Thieme Andreas, Roeske Sandra, Faber Jennifer, Sulzer Patricia, Minnerop Martina, Elben Saskia, Jacobi Heike, Reetz Kathrin, Dogan Imis, Barkhoff Miriam, Konczak Juergen, Wondzinski Elke, Siebler Mario, Mueller Oliver, Sure Ulrich, Schmahmann Jeremy D, Klockgether Thomas, Synofzik Matthis, Timmann Dagmar
Department of Neurology, Essen University Hospital, University of Duisburg-Essen, Hufelandstr. 55, 45147 Essen, Germany.
German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE) Bonn, Helmholtz Association, Venusberg-Campus 1, 53127 Bonn, Germany.
Neurol Res Pract. 2020 Sep 29;2:39. doi: 10.1186/s42466-020-00071-3. eCollection 2020.
Traditionally, cerebellar disorders including ataxias have been associated with deficits in motor control and motor learning. Since the 1980's growing evidence has emerged that cerebellar diseases also impede cognitive and affective processes such as executive and linguistic functions, visuospatial abilities and regulation of emotion and affect. This combination of non-motor symptoms has been named . To date, diagnosis relies on non-standardized bedside cognitive examination and, if available, detailed neuropsychological test batteries. Recently, a short and easy applicable bedside test (CCAS Scale) has been developed to screen for CCAS. It has been validated in an US-American cohort of adults with cerebellar disorders and healthy controls. As yet, the CCAS Scale has only been available in American English. We present a German version of the scale and the study protocol of its ongoing validation in a German-speaking patient cohort.
A preliminary German version has been created from the original CCAS Scale using a standardized translation procedure. This version has been pre-tested in cerebellar patients and healthy controls including medical experts and laypersons to ensure that instructions are well understandable, and that no information has been lost or added during translation. This preliminary German version will be validated in a minimum of 65 patients with cerebellar disease and 65 matched healthy controls. We test whether selectivity and sensitivity of the German CCAS Scale is comparable to the original CCAS Scale using the same cut-off values for each of the test items, and the same pass/ fail criteria to determine the presence of CCAS. Furthermore, internal consistency, test-retest and interrater reliability will be evaluated. In addition, construct validity will be tested in a subset of patients and controls in whom detailed neuropsychological testing will be available. Secondary aims will be examination of possible correlations between clinical features (e.g. disease duration, clinical ataxia scores) and CCAS scores.
The overall aim is to deliver a validated bedside test to screen for CCAS in German-speaking patients which can also be used in future natural history and therapeutic trials.
The study is registered at the German Clinical Study Register (DRKS-ID: DRKS00016854).
传统上,包括共济失调在内的小脑疾病一直与运动控制和运动学习缺陷相关。自20世纪80年代以来,越来越多的证据表明,小脑疾病也会阻碍认知和情感过程,如执行和语言功能、视觉空间能力以及情绪和情感调节。这种非运动症状的组合被称为[未提及具体名称]。迄今为止,诊断依赖于非标准化的床边认知检查,以及(如有)详细的神经心理测试组合。最近,一种简短且易于应用的床边测试(CCAS量表)已被开发出来用于筛查CCAS。它已在美国一组患有小脑疾病的成年人及健康对照中得到验证。到目前为止,CCAS量表仅以美式英语提供。我们展示该量表的德语版本及其在说德语的患者队列中正在进行的验证研究方案。
使用标准化翻译程序从原始CCAS量表创建了一个初步的德语版本。该版本已在小脑疾病患者和健康对照(包括医学专家和非专业人员)中进行了预测试,以确保说明易于理解,并且在翻译过程中没有信息丢失或添加。这个初步的德语版本将在至少65名小脑疾病患者和65名匹配的健康对照中进行验证。我们使用每个测试项目相同的临界值以及相同的通过/失败标准来确定CCAS的存在,测试德语CCAS量表的选择性和敏感性是否与原始CCAS量表相当。此外,将评估内部一致性、重测信度和评分者间信度。此外,将在一部分可进行详细神经心理测试的患者和对照中测试结构效度。次要目标将是检查临床特征(如疾病持续时间、临床共济失调评分)与CCAS评分之间可能的相关性。
总体目标是提供一种经过验证的床边测试,用于在说德语的患者中筛查CCAS,该测试也可用于未来的自然史和治疗试验。
该研究已在德国临床研究注册中心注册(DRKS-ID:DRKS00016854)。