Volume 17, Issue S6 e053429
CLINICAL MANIFESTATIONS
Free Access

Early detection of dementia and mild cognitive impairment with BrainCheck

Kevin H Sun

Kevin H Sun

BrainCheck, Inc, Houston, TX, USA

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Bin Huang

Corresponding Author

Bin Huang

BrainCheck, Inc, Houston, TX, USA

Correspondence

Bin Huang, BrainCheck, Inc, Houston, TX, USA

Email: [email protected]

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Reza Hosseini Ghomi

Reza Hosseini Ghomi

BrainCheck, Inc, Houston, TX, USA

Frontier Psychiatry, Billings, MT, USA

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First published: 31 December 2021

Abstract

Background

Nearly 14 million people in the United States and upwards of 152 million people globally in the coming decades are suffering from dementia. Early detection of dementia provides access to timely interventions and knowledge to improve patient health and quality of life before symptoms become severe. However, current rates of undetected dementia are reported as high as 61.7%. Mild cognitive impairment (MCI) is an early symptomatic clinical stage of dementia, thus, identification of this level of cognitive impairment is important for early detection. Current clinical practices, cognitive screening assessments (MoCA, etc.), and neuropsychological testing needed for the diagnosis of MCI shows itself to be time-consuming and resource-limited. An accurate and reliable computerized cognitive tool that could be more rapid and maximize accessibility to both patients and providers is needed to address the expected uptick in dementia, especially in the current era of practicing amidst the COVID-19 pandemic.

BrainCheck is a computerized cognitive testing tool and has been validated previously for its diagnostic accuracy for dementia-related cognitive decline. In this study, our objective was to evaluate BrainCheck’s ability to distinguish between Dementia, Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI), and Normal Cognitive (NC) for the potential use of early dementia detection.

Method

Ninety-nine participants associated with the University of Washington’s Memory and Brain Wellness Center were clinically evaluated with a form of Dementia (n=42), Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI)(n=22), or had Normal Cognition (NC)(n=35). Individual BrainCheck assessments and the Braincheck Overall Scores were compared statistically among their diagnostic groups. Also, Pearson correlation coefficients were calculated between participant BrainCheck Overall Scores and their MoCA scores.

Result

We found significant differences between the NC, MCI and Dementia groups based on the participants’ BrainCheck battery performances, where participants with more severe cognitive impairment performed worse across the individual assessments and on BrainCheck Overall Scores. Braincheck Overall Scores also achieved >88% sensitivity/specificity for separating NC from Dementia, and >77% sensitivity/specificity in separating the MCI group from NC/Dementia groups. Furthermore, Braincheck Overall Scores highly correlated with MoCA scores (ρ=0.69, p<0.001).

Conclusion

BrainCheck distinguished between diagnoses of Dementia, MCI, and NC, providing a potentially reliable tool for early detection of cognitive impairment.