School of Health and Rehabilitation Sciences, University of Queensland Centre for Hearing Research (CHEAR), The University of Queensland, Brisbane, Australia.
Manchester Centre for Audiology and Deafness, The University of Manchester, Manchester, UK.
J Am Geriatr Soc. 2023 May;71(5):1485-1494. doi: 10.1111/jgs.18241. Epub 2023 Feb 1.
Hearing impairment is common among older adults and affects cognitive assessments for identification of dementia which rely on good hearing function. We developed and validated a version of the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) for people with hearing impairment.
We adapted existing MoCA 8.1 items for people with hearing impairment by presenting instructions and stimuli in written rather than spoken format. One Attention domain and two Language domain items required substitution by alternative items. Three and four candidate items respectively were constructed and field-tested along with the items adapted to written form. We used a combination of individual item analysis and item substitution to select the set of alternative items to be included in the final form of the MoCA-H in place of the excluded original items. We then evaluated the performance and reliability of the final tool, including making any required adjustments for demographic factors.
One hundred and fifty-nine hearing-impaired participants, including 76 with normal cognition and 83 with dementia, completed the adapted version of the MoCA. A further 97 participants with normal hearing completed the standard MoCA as well as the novel items developed for the MoCA-H to assess score equivalence between the existing and alternative MoCA items and for independence from hearing impairment. Twenty-eight participants were retested between 2-4 weeks after initial testing. After the selection of optimal item set, the final MoCA-H had an area under the curve of 0.973 (95% CI 0.952-0.994). At a cut-point of 24 points or less sensitivity and specificity for dementia was 92.8% and 90.8%, respectively. The intraclass correlation for test-retest reliability was 0.92 (95%CI 0.78-0.97).
The MoCA-H is a sensitive and reliable means of identifying dementia among adults with acquired hearing impairment.
听力障碍在老年人中很常见,会影响到依赖良好听力功能来识别痴呆的认知评估。我们为听力障碍患者开发并验证了蒙特利尔认知评估(MoCA)的一个版本。
我们通过以书面形式而不是口头形式呈现说明和刺激,对现有的 MoCA 8.1 项目进行了适用于听力障碍患者的改编。一个注意力领域和两个语言领域的项目需要用替代项目替代。分别构建了三个和四个候选项目,并与改编为书面形式的项目一起进行了现场测试。我们结合了单个项目分析和项目替代,选择了一套替代项目,以替代排除的原始项目,纳入最终形式的 MoCA-H。然后,我们评估了最终工具的性能和可靠性,包括针对人口统计学因素进行任何必要的调整。
159 名听力障碍患者,包括 76 名认知正常和 83 名痴呆患者,完成了改编后的 MoCA。另外 97 名听力正常的参与者完成了标准 MoCA 以及为 MoCA-H 开发的新的项目,以评估现有和替代 MoCA 项目之间的分数等效性,以及与听力障碍的独立性。28 名参与者在初次测试后的 2-4 周之间进行了复测。在选择最佳项目集后,最终的 MoCA-H 的曲线下面积为 0.973(95%置信区间 0.952-0.994)。在 24 分或以下的截断值时,痴呆的敏感性和特异性分别为 92.8%和 90.8%。测试-重测信度的组内相关系数为 0.92(95%置信区间 0.78-0.97)。
MoCA-H 是一种敏感且可靠的方法,可用于识别后天性听力障碍成年人中的痴呆症。