REFUSING PASAT: A WINDOW INTO CLINICAL VULNERABILITY OF PEOPLE WITH MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS
Italian Multiple Sclerosis Foundation
Presentation
Date TBA
Event Information
Poster Board
PS03-08AM-027
Poster
View posterAbstract
Data from 1154 PwMS were analyzed. Participants were divided into three groups according to baseline PASAT performance: missing (refusal), low, and high. One-way ANOVAs or non-parametric tests were employed to compare groups on demographic, disease-related, cognitive, and functional measures, including both patient-reported and clinician-assessed outcomes.
Participants who did not complete the PASAT (N= 224) were older (60.1 ± 13.5 years), had longer disease duration (18.9 ± 12.2 years), higher disability (EDSS= 6.1 ± 2.0), and lower educational level (9.9 ± 3.9 years) than low- and high-PASAT groups (all p< 0.05). They also exhibited poorer cognitive performances as measured by MoCA (17.4 ± 6.5) and SDMT (22.5 ± 13.6) and reduced functional status reflected by greater assistance needs across domains (FIM= 91.1 ± 29.3).
PASAT non-completion at first assessment identifies a subgroup of PwMS with greater disability, cognitive deficits, and functional limitations. Test refusal may serve as a clinically relevant indicator of overall vulnerability, to be interpreted alongside established measures of disease burden. Assessing PASAT refusal may help clinicians to identify at-risk subgroups who may benefit from tailored interventions, complementing information obtained from conventional performance-based metrics.
Recommended posters
DECODING NEURONAL ACTIVITY PATTERNS UNDERLYING VISUAL DISCRIMINATION DEFICITS AND HETEROGENEITY IN MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS PATIENTS
Kira Engeroff, Daniel Kluger, Luisa Klotz, Albrecht Stroh
BLOOD COUNT-DERIVED INFLAMMATORY BIOMARKERS AND NEUROCOGNITIVE PERFORMANCE IN RELAPSING REMITTING MULTIPLE SCLEROSIS: A PROSPECTIVE PILOT STUDY
Andros Vazquez Montero, Graciela Agar Cárdenas Hernández, Edda Lydia Sciutto Conde, Gladis Del Carmen Fragoso González
VALIDATION OF THE SPANISH VERSION OF THE COGNISTAT SCREENING BATTERY FOR DETECTING AMNESTIC MILD COGNITIVE IMPAIRMENT
Cristina Sanchez-Castaneda, Imma Rico-Pons, Jaume Campdelacreu, Helena Berj-Kasem, Esther Caballero, Jordi Gascon-Bayarri
COMPARISON OF VISUAL COGNITIVE PROCESSING SPEED IN PARKINSON’S DISEASE AND ALZHEIMER’S DISEASE USING A NOVEL WAGON WHEEL ILLUSION-BASED METHOD
Makoto Eriguchi, Tetsuya Takahashi, Takamori Ayako, Kohei Suzuyama, Etsuo Horikawa, Hiroshi Nagayama, Hiroshi Takashima, Haruki Koike
THE PLURAL FORMS TEST: A VISION-INDEPENDENT TEST OF PREMORBID INTELLECTUAL ABILITY
Eray Ertugrul, Peter Bright, Ian van der Linde
CONVERGENT VALIDITY AND AGE EFFECTS OF A VIRTUAL REALITY ADAPTATION OF THE TRAIL MAKING TEST
Simon Schrenk, Marie Luisa Hoyer, Lukas Recker, Christian Poth, Kathrin Finke