4.7 Article

Apathy in Parkinson's Disease: A Retrospective Study of Its Prevalence and Relationship With Mood, Anxiety, and Cognitive Function

Journal

FRONTIERS IN PSYCHOLOGY
Volume 12, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2021.749624

Keywords

apathy; Parkinson's disease; depression; anxiety; neuropsychology

Funding

  1. Welcome Trust [089231/A/09/Z]
  2. Wellcome Trust [089231/A/09/Z] Funding Source: Wellcome Trust

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Apathy in Parkinson's disease often coexists with depression and anxiety, with pure apathy being rare. Patients with mood disorders perform worse in non-verbal intellectual functioning, while those with apathy do not show additional cognitive losses. This suggests that apathy in PD may be primarily an epiphenomenon of mood disorder.
Apathy is thought to be an important clinical feature of Parkinson's disease (PD). However, its prevalence ranges greatly across studies because of differing definitions, assessment tools, and patient inclusion criteria. Furthermore, it remains unclear how the presentation of apathy in PD is related to mood disorder and/or cognitive impairment. This study sought to examine the prevalence of a pure apathy syndrome in PD, distinct from both depression and anxiety, and reveal its associated cognitive profile. A retrospective study was performed on 177 PD patients who had completed measures of apathy [Apathy Evaluation Scale (AES)] and mood functioning [Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS)] and had undergone extensive neuropsychological assessment, using measures of intellectual functioning, memory, executive function, attention, language, visual processing, and cognitive speed; 14.7% of the sample indicated clinically significant levels of apathy, but this nearly always co-presented with depression and/or anxiety, with cases of pure apathy very rare (2.8%). On extensive cognitive assessment, patients with mood disorder performed worse on a measure of non-verbal intellectual functioning, but patients with additional apathy or apathy only demonstrated no further losses. The syndrome of apathy in PD greatly overlaps with that of depression and anxiety, suggesting that apathy in PD may be in large an epiphenomenon of mood disorder, with no specific neuropsychological features.

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