Cognitive impairment in Huntington's disease and its impact on functioning: Concept elicitation and cognitive debriefing for the Huntington's Disease Everyday Functioning (Hi-DEF) scale.

IF 2.1 Q3 NEUROSCIENCES
Journal of Huntington's disease Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Epub Date: 2024-10-23 DOI:10.1177/18796397241289044
Jennifer Petrillo, A Alex Levine, Jason Johannesen, Teya Lovell, Alissa Rams, Stefan Cano, Karen Anderson, Jennifer Klapper, Aaron Koenig
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Abstract

Background: Cognitive impairment in Huntington's disease (HD) is a key driver of disability that can have deleterious impacts on everyday functioning. Currently available patient-reported outcome measures may not adequately capture the impact of HD-related cognitive impairment on daily life, particularly higher-order executive functioning (i.e., processing information, decision making, multi-tasking, planning, etc.).

Objective: To address the unmet need to better quantify the functional sequelae of HD-related cognitive impairment by developing the Huntington's Disease Everyday Functioning (Hi-DEF) scale.

Methods: Qualitative interviews were conducted in two adult cohorts (25-65 years) with early stages of HD (i.e., huntingtin [mHTT] gene carriers with self-reported cognitive complaints but could still function independently). Cohort 1 included 10 dyads of participants with HD and their care partners, who completed concept elicitation interviews to identify cognitive challenges impacting everyday tasks, which was used to design a draft item-set. Cohort 2, which included 15 additional participants with HD, cognitively debriefed this item-set.

Results: In Cohort 1, issues with executive functioning were reported 32 times by participants with HD and 22 times by care partners, and challenges with functioning were reported 46 times by participants with HD and 20 times by care partners. Based on these reports, the Hi-DEF scale was developed and cognitive debriefing interviews evaluated its content validity, relevance, clarity, interpretation, and acceptability. Psychometric validation of the Hi-DEF scale is reported elsewhere.

Conclusions: These interviews revealed the impact of HD-related cognitive impairment on everyday functioning and supported the content validity, relevance, clarity, interpretation, and acceptability of the Hi-DEF scale.

亨廷顿氏病的认知障碍及其对功能的影响:亨廷顿氏病日常功能(Hi-DEF)量表的概念引出和认知汇报
背景:亨廷顿舞蹈病(HD)的认知障碍是残疾的关键驱动因素,可对日常功能产生有害影响。目前可用的患者报告的结果测量可能无法充分捕捉hd相关认知障碍对日常生活的影响,特别是高阶执行功能(即处理信息,决策,多任务处理,计划等)。目的:通过开发亨廷顿病日常功能(Hi-DEF)量表,解决对hd相关认知障碍的功能后遗症进行更好量化的未满足需求。方法:对两组患有早期HD(即亨廷顿蛋白[mHTT]基因携带者,自述有认知障碍,但仍能独立运作)的成人(25-65岁)进行定性访谈。队列1包括10对患有HD的参与者及其护理伙伴,他们完成了概念启发访谈,以确定影响日常任务的认知挑战,并用于设计项目集草稿。队列2,包括15名额外的HD患者,对该项目集进行认知汇报。结果:在队列1中,HD患者报告了32次执行功能问题,护理伙伴报告了22次,HD患者报告了46次功能挑战,护理伙伴报告了20次。在这些报告的基础上,开发了Hi-DEF量表,并通过认知汇报访谈评估了其内容的有效性、相关性、清晰度、解释性和可接受性。其他地方报道了Hi-DEF量表的心理测量验证。结论:这些访谈揭示了hd相关认知障碍对日常功能的影响,并支持了Hi-DEF量表的内容效度、相关性、清晰度、解释性和可接受性。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
9.70%
发文量
60
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