4.7 Article

Development of a Gastrointestinal-Myoelectrical-Activity-Based Nomogram Model for Predicting the Risk of Mild Cognitive Impairment

Journal

BIOMOLECULES
Volume 12, Issue 12, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/biom12121861

Keywords

mild cognitive impairment; Alzheimer's disease; electrogastroenterography; LASSO regression; nomogram; decision curve analysis

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This study aimed to develop a risk prediction model for MCI based on gastrointestinal myoelectrical activity. The model showed good prediction ability and clinical usability in predicting the risk of MCI.
Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is the prodromal stage and an important risk factor of Alzheimer's disease (AD). Interventions at the MCI stage are significant in reducing the occurrence of AD. However, there are still many obstacles to the screening of MCI, resulting in a large number of patients going undetected. Given the strong correlation between gastrointestinal function and neuropsychiatric disorders, the aim of this study is to develop a risk prediction model for MCI based on gastrointestinal myoelectrical activity. The Mini-Mental State Examination and electrogastroenterography were applied to 886 participants in western China. All participants were randomly assigned to the training and validation sets in a ratio of 7:3. In the training set, risk variables were screened using LASSO regression and logistic regression, and risk prediction models were built based on nomogram and decision curve analysis, then validation was performed. Eight predictors were selected in the training set, including four electrogastroenterography parameters (rhythm disturbance, dominant frequency and dominant power ratio of gastric channel after meal, and time difference of intestinal channel after meal). The area under the ROC curve for the prediction model was 0.74 in the training set and 0.75 in the validation set, both of which exhibited great prediction ability. Furthermore, decision curve analysis displayed that the net benefit was more desirable when the risk thresholds ranged from 15% to 35%, indicating that the nomogram was clinically usable. The model based on gastrointestinal myoelectrical activity has great significance in predicting the risk of MCI and is expected to be an alternative to scales assessment.

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