Cognitive dysfunction is an important aspect of Parkinson disease (PD) and is increasingly being examined in various large scale PD clinical studies. However, the sensitivity of some of the cognitive measures used for detecting change in cognitive status in early PD patients is not known nor is the relationship between cognitive outcome measures and other motor and non-motor disease characteristics and various demographic parameters in early PD patients. The current analysis of the NET-PD cohort (i.e., untreated patients) was undertaken to: 1) assess which (if any) baseline demographic parameters correlate with baseline cognitive measures and any potential change in cognitive measures over the 12-18 months evaluation period; 2) assess the extent to which cognitive measures employed (i.e., Repeatable Battery for the Assessment of Neuropsychological Status (RBANS), Frontal Assessment Battery (FAB) and Letter-Number Sequencing) are sensitive to change over time; 3) examine whether initiation of symptomatic therapy is associated with change in cognitive status. At baseline, NET-PD subjects had no significant impairment on the assessments employed. Only education and age were significant predictors of cognitive score at baseline. None of the summary measures were indicative of change in cognitive status over the 12-18 months of study. These results suggest either the cognitive domains examined are not affected in the population examined or that more sensitive measures of cognition than those currently employed may need to be considered for use in a large trial setting in which an early, highly educated PD population is studied.
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