TY - JOUR
T1 - FACEmemory®, an Innovative Online Platform for Episodic Memory Pre-Screening
T2 - Findings from the First 3,000 Participants
AU - Alegret, Montserrat
AU - García-Gutiérrez, Fernando
AU - Muñoz, Nathalia
AU - Espinosa, Ana
AU - Ortega, Gemma
AU - Lleonart, Núria
AU - Rodríguez, Isabel
AU - Rosende-Roca, Maitee
AU - Pytel, Vanesa
AU - Cantero-Fortiz, Yahveth
AU - Rentz, Dorene M.
AU - Marquié, Marta
AU - Valero, Sergi
AU - Ruiz, Agustin
AU - Butler, Christopher
AU - Boada, Mercè
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 - IOS Press. All rights reserved.
PY - 2024/1/30
Y1 - 2024/1/30
N2 - Background: The FACEmemory® online platform comprises a complex memory test and sociodemographic, medical, and family questions. This is the first study of a completely self-administered memory test with voice recognition, pre-tested in a memory clinic, sensitive to Alzheimer's disease, using information and communication technologies, and offered freely worldwide. Objective: To investigate the demographic and clinical variables associated with the total FACEmemory score, and to identify distinct patterns of memory performance on FACEmemory. Methods: Data from the first 3,000 subjects who completed the FACEmemory test were analyzed. Descriptive analyses were applied to demographic, FACEmemory, and medical and family variables; t-test and chi-square analyses were used to compare participants with preserved versus impaired performance on FACEmemory (cut-off = 32); multiple linear regression was used to identify variables that modulate FACEmemory performance; and machine learning techniques were applied to identify different memory patterns. Results: Participants had a mean age of 50.57 years and 13.65 years of schooling; 64.07% were women, and 82.10% reported memory complaints with worries. The group with impaired FACEmemory performance (20.40%) was older, had less schooling, and had a higher prevalence of hypertension, diabetes, dyslipidemia, and family history of neurodegenerative disease than the group with preserved performance. Age, schooling, sex, country, and completion of the medical and family history questionnaire were associated with the FACEmemory score. Finally, machine learning techniques identified four patterns of FACEmemory performance: normal, dysexecutive, storage, and completely impaired. Conclusions: FACEmemory is a promising tool for assessing memory in people with subjective memory complaints and for raising awareness about cognitive decline in the community.
AB - Background: The FACEmemory® online platform comprises a complex memory test and sociodemographic, medical, and family questions. This is the first study of a completely self-administered memory test with voice recognition, pre-tested in a memory clinic, sensitive to Alzheimer's disease, using information and communication technologies, and offered freely worldwide. Objective: To investigate the demographic and clinical variables associated with the total FACEmemory score, and to identify distinct patterns of memory performance on FACEmemory. Methods: Data from the first 3,000 subjects who completed the FACEmemory test were analyzed. Descriptive analyses were applied to demographic, FACEmemory, and medical and family variables; t-test and chi-square analyses were used to compare participants with preserved versus impaired performance on FACEmemory (cut-off = 32); multiple linear regression was used to identify variables that modulate FACEmemory performance; and machine learning techniques were applied to identify different memory patterns. Results: Participants had a mean age of 50.57 years and 13.65 years of schooling; 64.07% were women, and 82.10% reported memory complaints with worries. The group with impaired FACEmemory performance (20.40%) was older, had less schooling, and had a higher prevalence of hypertension, diabetes, dyslipidemia, and family history of neurodegenerative disease than the group with preserved performance. Age, schooling, sex, country, and completion of the medical and family history questionnaire were associated with the FACEmemory score. Finally, machine learning techniques identified four patterns of FACEmemory performance: normal, dysexecutive, storage, and completely impaired. Conclusions: FACEmemory is a promising tool for assessing memory in people with subjective memory complaints and for raising awareness about cognitive decline in the community.
KW - Alzheimer's disease
KW - community
KW - computerized assessment
KW - early detection
KW - memory
KW - memory impairment
KW - new technologies
KW - patient engagement
KW - subjective memory complaints
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U2 - 10.3233/JAD-230983
DO - 10.3233/JAD-230983
M3 - Article
C2 - 38217602
AN - SCOPUS:85184024156
SN - 1387-2877
VL - 97
SP - 1173
EP - 1187
JO - Journal of Alzheimer's Disease
JF - Journal of Alzheimer's Disease
IS - 3
ER -