Weizenbaum Emma L, Hsieh Stephanie, Molinare Cassidy, Soberanes Daniel, Christiano Caitlyn, Viera Andrea M Román, Anzai Juliana A U, Moreno Stephanie, Campbell Emily C, Yang Hyun-Sik, Marshall Gad A, Sperling Reisa A, Papp Kathryn V, Amariglio Rebecca E
Department of Neurology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, 02115, USA.
Department of Neurology, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA, 02115, USA; Department of Neurology, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, 02129, USA.
J Prev Alzheimers Dis. 2025 Mar;12(3):100057. doi: 10.1016/j.tjpad.2025.100057. Epub 2025 Jan 13.
The multi-day Boston Remote Assessment of Neurocognitive Health (BRANCH) is a remote, web-based assessment designed to capture the earliest cognitive changes in the preclinical stage of Alzheimer's disease (AD). It has been validated in unimpaired older adults, but as individuals progress on the AD continuum, assessments need to remain feasible and valid at different clinical stages. The focus of this study was to assess feasibility and validity of multi-day BRANCH in participants with and without cognitive impairment.
For seven days participants completed the BRANCH paradigm to capture a muti-day learning curve score. Participants also completed the mini-mental-status-exam (MMSE) and the Quick Dementia Rating Scale (QDRS). The primary cohort included 81 older adults: 38 with cognitive impairment (CI) and 43 cognitively-unimpaired (CU). A complementary replication cohort included 16 participants with consensus-defined mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and 47 demographically-matched cognitively unimpaired participants.
Multi-day BRANCH was feasibile with 92 % or participants completing all seven days of testing. More CI than CU reported nervousness and found tasks slightly less enjoyable on Day 1, but ratings increased at a similar rate in both groups. Convergent validity was confirmed by a positive association between BRANCH and total MMSE and QDRS scores. There was a large effect size of group status on BRANCH (CI vs. CU; Cohen's d = 0.83) and per logistic regression, BRANCH significantly predicted group status (β = -1.49, p < 0.001); even more so between MCI and CU in the replication cohort.
Findings suggest that a remotely administered web-based assessment of multi-day learning is feasible and valid in participants with and without cognitive impairment.
为期多天的波士顿神经认知健康远程评估(BRANCH)是一种基于网络的远程评估,旨在捕捉阿尔茨海默病(AD)临床前阶段最早的认知变化。它已在未受损的老年人中得到验证,但随着个体在AD连续体上的进展,评估需要在不同临床阶段保持可行性和有效性。本研究的重点是评估为期多天的BRANCH在有和没有认知障碍的参与者中的可行性和有效性。
参与者在七天内完成BRANCH范式,以获得多天学习曲线分数。参与者还完成了简易精神状态检查(MMSE)和快速痴呆评定量表(QDRS)。主要队列包括81名老年人:38名有认知障碍(CI)和43名认知未受损(CU)。一个补充性重复队列包括16名经共识定义为轻度认知障碍(MCI)的参与者和47名在人口统计学上匹配的认知未受损参与者。
为期多天的BRANCH是可行的,92%的参与者完成了全部七天的测试。报告紧张的CI参与者比CU参与者更多,并且在第一天发现任务的趣味性略低,但两组的评分以相似的速度增加。BRANCH与MMSE总分和QDRS得分之间的正相关证实了收敛效度。组状态对BRANCH有很大影响(CI与CU;科恩d = 0.83),根据逻辑回归,BRANCH显著预测组状态(β = -1.49,p < 0.001);在重复队列中,MCI和CU之间的影响甚至更大。
研究结果表明,对有和没有认知障碍的参与者进行基于网络的远程多天学习评估是可行和有效的。