NUCOG10: The development and validation of a short-form of the NUCOG cognitive assessment tool
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Objective
The Neuropsychiatry Unit Cognitive Assessment (NUCOG) is a valid and reliable screening tool used in detecting cognitive deficits in a range of neurological and psychiatric conditions. We aimed to develop abbreviated versions of the NUCOG tool using retrospective data, and to assess their psychometric performance in distinguishing between healthy cognition and dementia.
Methods
Healthy controls ( n =132, 41%) and those with dementia ( n =191, 59%) were randomised into a ‘training’ cohort ( n =134, 70%) for the development and a ‘testing’ cohort ( n =57, 30%) for validation of the short-form versions. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) curves were first computed for each of the 24 original NUCOG items. Items were ranked according to area under the curve (AUC) values to create 5-item, 10-item and 15-item short-form versions, which were subsequently validated.
Results
The psychometric properties of the NUCOG short-form versions were comparable to the original, with all maintaining high convergent validity and reliability. Of the three versions, the 10-item version strikes the ideal balance of breadth and brevity. With a cut-off score of 42/54, the 10-item version generated similar sensitivity, specificity and predictive values for dementia as the original NUCOG, with a sensitivity of 0.98, specificity of 0.95, and positive and negative predictive values of 0.97.
Conclusions
The 10-item NUCOG (“NUCOG10”) has strengths in its shorter administration time, of approximately 10 minutes, high reliability and validity, and retention of items from each cognitive domain from the original NUCOG. Future research may involve testing these short-forms in non-tertiary settings, across dementia subtypes and in non-dementia groups.