4.5 Article

Measuring Change in Everyday Cognition: Development and Initial Validation of the Cognitive Change Checklist (3CL)

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY
Volume 17, Issue 6, Pages 516-525

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1097/JGP.0b013e31819e2d6c

Keywords

Rating scales; everyday function; cognition; aging; cognitive decline; everyday cognition; dementia

Funding

  1. James A. Haley Veterans' Hospital, Tampa, FL
  2. National Institute on Aging (Florida Alzheimer's Disease Research Center) [1P50 AG025711-01]

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Objective: There is ample evidence to support an informant-based approach in screening efforts for the identification of cases of Mild Cognitive Impairment and early Alzheimer disease, but existing instruments are not maximally designed to capture recent changes in cognitive status of the types seen in these disorders. The authors describe the construction of a multiscale informant rating checklist (Cognitive Change Checklist; 3CL) designed to be sensitive to the earliest stages of cognitive decline associated with degenerative dementias. Design: Scale development, reliability, and validity study. Setting: Memory Disorder Clinics. Participants: Three hundred fifty-nine individuals are evaluated for a memory disorder. Results: The analyses resulted in a 28-item informant rating checklist of cognitive change that is composed of four nonoverlapping scales titled Memory, Executive, Language, and Remote Recall. Scale reliabilities were found to be well within guidelines to support their use in the clinical assessment of change in global cognition and specific cognitive domains. Substantive support for the validity of the checklist was obtained from correlational analyses that showed significant scale relationships with neuro-cognitive measures, from the finding of differences in scale scores among diagnostic groups that paralleled that of the neurocognitive measures, and from examination of the sensitivity of the scales in receiver operating characteristic analyses. Conclusion: These findings provide support for the use of the checklist as a clinical tool to facilitate identification of cases of Mild Cognitive Impairment and early Alzheimer disease. Further examination of the diagnostic utility of the scale, and of its value in combination with cognitive screening measures, will also be required. (Am J Geriatr Psychiatry 2009; 17:516-525)

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