Development of a rapid screener through network analysis to identify central cognitive complaints in haemodialysis patients: a cross-sectional study

Objectives Cognitive impairments and cognitive complaints are commonly present in dialysis patients and can affect clinical, functional, occupational, and psychosocial well-being. It is important to screen for patients’ cognitive status as it offers a gateway to specialty referral, prevention or reh...

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Main Authors: Konstadina Griva, Behram A Khan, Frederick H F Chan, Pearl Sim, Phoebe X H Lim, Jason C J Choo
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMJ Publishing Group 2025-03-01
Series:BMJ Open
Online Access:https://bmjopen.bmj.com/content/15/3/e088502.full
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Summary:Objectives Cognitive impairments and cognitive complaints are commonly present in dialysis patients and can affect clinical, functional, occupational, and psychosocial well-being. It is important to screen for patients’ cognitive status as it offers a gateway to specialty referral, prevention or rehabilitation programmes, and personalisation of clinical care. The Patient’s Assessment of Own Functioning Inventory (PAOFI) is a comprehensive questionnaire that assesses patient-reported difficulties in memory, language, motor/sensory-perceptual skills and higher-level cognitive function. In the current study, we adopted network analysis to identify central cognitive complaints in dialysis patients and derived a PAOFI short form (PAOFI-SF) based on these core symptoms to improve screening efficiency in real-world renal settings.Design Multicentre, cross-sectional study.Setting Participants were recruited from 10 community-based dialysis centres in Singapore, from May to November 2022.Participants A total of 369 eligible haemodialysis patients were invited to join the study, and 268 completed the measures (response rate 72.6%).Outcome measures Cognitive assessment tools including the PAOFI and the Montreal Cognitive Assessment were administered.Results Based on the PAOFI measure, 98 participants (36.6%) endorsed the presence of three or more complaints, indicating clinically significant cognitive complaints. Network analysis identified five central cognitive complaints among dialysis patients: problem-solving difficulty, difficulty following instructions, forgetting how to do tasks, difficulty being understood, and forgetting people known years ago. These core items were combined into a five-item short form of PAOFI, which showed good reliability and validity, and an area under the curve of 83.4% in identifying clinically significant cognitive complaints. The optimal cut-off point of the short form was 11.5 (out of 30), with a specificity of 89.5%, sensitivity of 63.9%, positive predictive value of 77.5% and negative predictive value of 81.4%. This cut-off point also predicted objective cognitive performance even after controlling for sociodemographic and clinical confounders.Conclusions Pending future replication and external validation, the PAOFI-SF may be suitable for use in renal care settings as an initial screening tool to identify patients with cognitive complaints and increased risk of objective cognitive impairments.
ISSN:2044-6055