Webb Sam S, Sun Luning, Tang Eugene Yee Hing, Demeyere Nele
Nuffield Department of Clinical Neurosciences, University of Oxford, Oxford, UK.
The Psychometrics Centre, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, UK.
Eur Stroke J. 2025 Jul 27:23969873251358811. doi: 10.1177/23969873251358811.
No stroke-specific cognitive screen currently exists for community-dwelling chronic stroke survivors, with primary care and community settings relying on dementia tools which often do not consider specific post-stroke impairments. The Oxford Cognitive Screen (OCS) was developed for use in acute stroke, but its administration time is prohibitive for brief screening. Here, we aimed to develop, standardise and psychometrically validate the Mini-Oxford Cognitive Screen (Mini-OCS), a brief (<8 min) cognitive screen aimed for use in chronic stroke.
Existing full OCS data for 464 English participants who were ⩾6 months post-stroke were analysed for the possibility of a short-form. Theoretical choices were made to adapt the short-form to be suitable for use in chronic stroke. The Mini-OCS was then completed by 164 neurologically healthy controls ( = 68.66; SD = 12.18, of education 15.40; SD = 3.64, 61% female), and 89 chronic stroke survivors ( = 69.86; SD = 14.83, education = 14.29; SD = 4.01, 44.94% female, since stroke = 597.02; SD = 881.12, 78.57% ischaemic, Median NIHSS = 6.5 (IQR = 4-11)). In addition, the original OCS, the Montreal Cognitive Assessment, and an extended neuropsychological battery were administered. Psychometric properties of the Mini-OCS were evaluated via construct validity and retest reliability.
Normative data for the Mini-OCS is provided and known-group discrimination demonstrates increased sensitivity in the memory and executive function domains compared to the OCS. The Mini-OCS further met all appropriate benchmarks for evidence of retest reliability and construct validity.
The Mini-OCS is a short-form standardised cognitive screening tool with initial evidence of good psychometric properties for use in a chronic stroke population.
目前尚无专门针对社区慢性卒中幸存者的认知筛查工具,基层医疗和社区机构依赖痴呆症筛查工具,而这些工具往往未考虑卒中后的特定损伤。牛津认知筛查量表(OCS)是为急性卒中设计的,但因其施测时间过长,不适合用于简短筛查。在此,我们旨在开发、标准化并进行心理测量学验证迷你牛津认知筛查量表(Mini-OCS),这是一种简短(<8分钟)的认知筛查量表,旨在用于慢性卒中患者。
分析了464名卒中后≥6个月的英国参与者的完整OCS数据,以确定是否有可能简化为简短量表。基于理论进行选择,以使简化版适合用于慢性卒中。随后,164名神经功能正常的对照者(年龄=68.66岁;标准差=12.18岁,受教育年限=15.40年;标准差=3.64年,61%为女性)和89名慢性卒中幸存者完成了Mini-OCS测试(年龄=69.86岁;标准差=14.83岁,受教育年限=14.29年;标准差=4.01年,44.94%为女性,卒中后时长=597.02天;标准差=881.12天,78.57%为缺血性卒中,美国国立卫生研究院卒中量表(NIHSS)中位数=6.5(四分位间距=4-11))。此外,还进行了原始OCS、蒙特利尔认知评估量表测试以及一套扩展的神经心理学测试。通过结构效度和重测信度评估Mini-OCS的心理测量学特性。
提供了Mini-OCS的常模数据,已知组差异分析表明,与OCS相比,Mini-OCS在记忆和执行功能领域的敏感性更高。Mini-OCS还进一步满足了重测信度和结构效度证据的所有适当标准。
Mini-OCS是一种简化版的标准化认知筛查工具,初步证据表明其在慢性卒中人群中具有良好的心理测量学特性。