five

Montreal Cognitive Assessment’s auditory items (MoCA-22): Normative data and reliable change indices

收藏
Taylor & Francis Group2024-08-29 更新2026-04-16 收录
下载链接:
https://tandf.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Montreal_Cognitive_Assessment_s_auditory_items_MoCA-22_Normative_data_and_reliable_change_indices/26872134/1
下载链接
链接失效反馈
官方服务:
资源简介:
Our objective was to establish normative data and reliable change indices (RCI) for the Montreal Cognitive Assessment’s auditory items (MoCA-22). 4,935 cognitively unimpaired participants were administered the MoCA during an in-person visit to an Alzheimer’s Disease Research Center (<i>M<sub>age</sub></i> = 67.9, <i>M<sub>education</sub></i> = 16.2, 65.8% women, 75.9% non-Hispanic-White), with 2,319 unimpaired participants returning for follow-up. Normative values and cutoffs were developed using demographic predictions from ordinary and quantile regression. Test-retest reliability was calculated using Spearman and intraclass correlations. RCI values were calculated using Chelune and colleagues’ (1993) formula. Education, age, and sex were all statistically related to MoCA-22 scores, with education having the strongest relationship. Notably, these relationships were not consistent across MoCA-22 quantiles, with education becoming more important and sex becoming less important for predicting low scores. These models were integrated into a calculator for deriving normative scores for an individual case. Furthermore, there was adequate-to-good test-retest reliability (ϱ = 0.56 95% CI [.54, .59]; ICC = 0.75, 95% CI [.73, .77]) and changes of at least 2-3 points are necessary to identify reliable change at 1-3-year follow-up. These findings add to the literature regarding utility of the MoCA-22 in the cognitive screening of older adults.
提供机构:
Amitrano, Nicholas R.; Lord, Alinda Rafaela; González, David Andrés
创建时间:
2024-08-29
二维码
社区交流群
二维码
科研交流群
商业服务