Journal of Personalized Medicine (Jan 2022)

Cognitive Reserve in Early Manifest Huntington Disease Patients: Leisure Time Is Associated with Lower Cognitive and Functional Impairment

  • Simone Migliore,
  • Giulia D’Aurizio,
  • Eugenia Scaricamazza,
  • Sabrina Maffi,
  • Consuelo Ceccarelli,
  • Giovanni Ristori,
  • Silvia Romano,
  • Anna Castaldo,
  • Mario Fichera,
  • Giuseppe Curcio,
  • Ferdinando Squitieri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm12010036
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 1
p. 36

Abstract

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We focused on Cognitive Reserve (CR) in patients with early Huntington Disease (HD) and investigated whether clinical outcomes might be influenced by lifetime intellectual enrichment over time. CR was evaluated by means of the Cognitive Reserve Index questionnaire (CRIq), an internationally validated scale which includes three sections: education, working activity, and leisure time. The clinical HD variables were quantified at three different time points (baseline-t0, 1 year follow up-t1 and 2 years follow up-t2) as per the Unified Huntington’s Disease Rating Scale (UHDRS), an internationally standardized and validated scale including motor, cognitive, functional and behavioral assays. Our sample consisted of 75 early manifest patients, withclinical stage scored according to the Total Functional Capacity (TFC) scale. Our correlational analysis highlighted a significant inverse association between CRIq leisure time (CRIq_LA) and longitudinal functional impairment (namely, the differential TFC score between t2 and t0 or ΔTFC) (p p p < 0.05). Our results suggest that higher is the CRIq_LA, milder is the progression of HD in terms of functional, multidimensional and cognitive outcome.

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