1 research outputs found
Supplementary Material for: Dementia-Predicting Cognitive Risk Score and Its Correlation with Cortical Thickness in Parkinson Disease
<p><b><i>Background:</i></b> We developed a risk score system to predict
risks of developing dementia in individual Parkinson disease (PD)
patients using baseline neuropsychological tests. <b><i>Methods:</i></b>
A total of 216 nondemented PD patients underwent a baseline
neuropsychological evaluation and were followed up for a mean of 2.7
(±1.1) years. Univariate Cox regression models controlled for age,
gender, and education selected neuropsychological tests individually
predicting dementia risk. Then, a multivariate Cox regression model
combined them into a cognitive risk score system. Cortical areas
correlating with cognitive risk score were investigated using a separate
MRI data set from 207 nondemented PD patients. <b><i>Results:</i></b>
Fifty-two patients (23.9%) developed dementia. The univariate Cox
regression analyses identified the confrontational naming and semantic
fluency tests, frontal/executive function tests, immediate verbal memory
test, and visuospatial function test as predicting dementia risk. The
calculated cognitive risk score (range 53-188) predicted future dementia
with moderate accuracy (integrated area under the curve = 0.79; 95% CI:
0.73-0.85). A higher cognitive risk score correlated with cortical
thinning in the right anteromedial temporal cortex, bilateral posterior
cingulate cortex, right anterior cingulate cortex, left parahippocampal
gyrus, and right superior frontal cortex in a separate MRI data set. <b><i>Conclusion:</i></b> The cognitive risk score system is a useful approach to predict the dementia risk among PD patients.</p