Cross‐cultural adaptation, validity and reliability of the Everyday Cognition Scale in Mexico M‐ECog in Older Adults with Subjective Cognitive Decline, Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer's Dementia.

Autor: Mimenza, Alberto, Pillajo, Brenda, Gutiérrez, Lidia Antonia, Trejo, Natalia Arias, Aguilar‐Navarro, Sara Gloria
Zdroj: Alzheimer's & Dementia: The Journal of the Alzheimer's Association; Dec2023 Supplement 18, Vol. 19, p1-2, 2p
Abstrakt: Background: The Everyday Cognition (ECog) scale was created to assess the functional abilities of older adults across a wide range of abilities between normal aging and dementia. The original ECog was shown to have convergent and divergent external validity. Developed in 2008 by Farias et al and updated in 2021. This scale screens early cognitive alterations such as Subjective Cognitive Decline (SCD), Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) and Alzheimer's dementia (AD) through the decline of basic activities and instruments of daily life (DLA)To establish validity, reliability, and cross‐cultural adaptation of the ECog in Spanish (M‐ECog) to identify: SCD, MCI, and Alzheimer's‐type dementia in older Mexican adults. Method: 200 patients and 200 informants in a memory clinic of a third level hospital in Mexico City. Four groups were formed: 50 cognitively healthy (CH), 50 SQD, 50 MCI and 50 AD. The clinical evaluation included: sociodemographic aspects, cognitive status by the Mini‐Mental State Evaluation (MMSE) and Montreal Cognitive Evaluation Spanish version (MoCA‐E). The informants rated the functional status measured through the KATZ and Lawton & Brody scales, as well as the ECog Spanish version (M‐ECog). Result: The internal consistency of the overall function of the M‐ECog (Cronbach's alpha) was 0.881. The intraclass correlation coefficient was 0.877 (95% CI, 0.850‐0.902; p<0.001). M‐ECog was significantly correlated with DLA 0.40 (95% CI, 0.320‐0.471; p<0.001), MMSE 0.68; (95% CI, 0.650‐0.710; p<0.001) and MoCA‐E 0.70 (95% CI, 0.620‐0.892; p<0.001). And it differentiated patients with SCD, MCI and AD from CH (p < 0.002). The area under the curve (AUC) for SQD was 0.70 (95% CI, 0.58‐0.82), p < 0.005 with a cut‐off value of 46 points, (Sensitivity (S) 99%, and Specificity (E) of 96%; the AUC for MCI was 0.94 (95% CI, 0.89‐0.99), p < 0.001 with a cut‐off point of 52 points, (S: 97%, E: 27%); and for the dementia group, the AUC was 0.86 (95% CI, 0.79‐0.92), p <0.001 with a cut‐off value of 85 points, with (S: 97%, E: 51%). Conclusion: M‐ECog is a valid, reliable, useful instrument that measures daily skills mediated by cognition in older Mexican adults, self‐applicable (patients and informants) with SCD, MCI and Alzheimer's Dementia [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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