AI Article Synopsis

  • Primary progressive aphasias (PPA) lack consistent language tests for diagnosis and follow-up, prompting the development of a new rapid test, "PARIS," aimed at improving reliability.
  • The "PARIS" test showed 88% inter-rater consistency and effectively distinguished PPA from typical Alzheimer's disease (AD), while also identifying two common PPA variants—semantic and logopenic.
  • With a quick application time of about 10 minutes, the "PARIS" test demonstrated high sensitivity for detecting language decline, making it a promising tool for diagnosis and therapeutic research in neurodegenerative diseases impacting language.

Article Abstract

Primary progressive aphasias (PPA) have been investigated by clinical, therapeutic, and fundamental research but examiner-consistent language tests for reliable reproducible diagnosis and follow-up are lacking. We developed and evaluated a rapid language test for PPA ("PARIS") assessing its inter-examiner consistency, its power to detect and classify PPA, and its capacity to identify language decline after a follow-up of 9 months. To explore the reliability and specificity/sensitivity of the test it was applied to PPA patients ( = 36), typical amnesic Alzheimer's disease (AD) patients ( = 24) and healthy controls ( = 35), while comparing it to two rapid examiner-consistent language tests used in stroke-induced aphasia ("LAST", "ART"). The application duration of the "PARIS" was ~10 min and its inter-rater consistency was of 88%. The three tests distinguished healthy controls from AD and PPA patients but only the "PARIS" reliably separated PPA from AD and allowed for classifying the two most frequent PPA variants: semantic and logopenic PPA. Compared to the "LAST" and "ART," the "PARIS" also had the highest sensitivity for detecting language decline. The "PARIS" is an efficient, rapid, and highly examiner-consistent language test for the diagnosis, classification, and follow-up of frequent PPA variants. It might also be a valuable tool for providing end-points in future therapeutic trials on PPA and other neurodegenerative diseases affecting language processing.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7813774PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fneur.2020.571657DOI Listing

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