4.2 Article

Intraindividual Variability in Verbal Fluency Performance Is Moderated by and Predictive of Mild Cognitive Impairments

Journal

NEUROPSYCHOLOGY
Volume 34, Issue 1, Pages 31-42

Publisher

AMER PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSOC
DOI: 10.1037/neu0000576

Keywords

intraindividual variability; verbal fluency; aging; mild cognitive impairments

Funding

  1. National Institutes on Aging [R01AG036921, R01AG044007]

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Objective: The current study was designed to achieve 2 primary objectives: (a) determine the moderating effect of mild cognitive impairments (MCI) on intraindividual variability in semantic and letter fluency performance taking into account longitudinal annual assessments; and (b) establish predictive utility for intraindividual variability in semantic and letter fluency performance as a risk factor of incident MCI. Methods: Participants were community-residing older adults (n = 514; M age = 75.89 +/- 6.45; 55.1% female). Sixty participants were diagnosed with MCI at baseline and 50 developed incident MCI during the follow-up. We operationalized intraindividual variability as word generation slopes derived from 3 consecutive time intervals during the standard 1-min administration of both letter and semantic fluency tasks (i.e., 0-20 s, 21-40 s, and 41-60 s). Results: Linear mixed effects models revealed significant within task slope effects for semantic (estimate = -8.350; p < .0001; 95% confidence interval [CI] = -8.604, -8.095) and letter (estimate = -5.068; p < .0001; 95% CI [-5.268, -4.869]) fluency indicating that word generation declined over the course of both tasks. The two-way interactions of MCI x Slope were significant for semantic (estimate = 1.34; p = .001; 95% CI [0.551, 2.126]) and letter (estimate = 0.733; p = .020; 95% CI [0.116, 1.350]) fluency indicating attenuated slopes among MCI participants compared to controls taking into account repeated annual assessments. Cox proportional-hazards models revealed that attenuated word generation slope, at baseline, in semantic (hazard ratio [HR] = 2.063; p = .015; 95% = 1.149 to 3.702) but not letter (HR = 0.704; p = .243; 95% CI [0.391, 1.269]) fluency was associated with increased risk of incident MCI. Conclusion: Intraindividual variability in verbal fluency performance has clinical and predictive utility; it can be easily incorporated into testing batteries in clinical and research settings.

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