Objective: We present the preliminary study of the 42-item Semantic Memory Test (SMT-42), a test developed to distinguish semantic variant primary progressive aphasia (svPPA) from the other variants: logopenic (lPPA) and nonfluent/agrammatic (naPPA). The test requires the patient to retrieve the conceptual features of items belonging to different lexical categories.
Methods: In the first study, we administered the French version of the SMT-42 to a population of healthy subjects and to patients with svPPA matched to a subgroup of the healthy subjects. In the second study, we administered the SMT-42 to four groups of patients (with svPPA, lPPA, naPPA and Alzheimer's disease [AD], respectively) to study its capacity to differentiate patients suffering from svPPA from the other patients.
Results: In the first study, 109 healthy subjects were included, 15 of whom were paired with 15 subjects presenting with svPPA. In the second study, designed to compare groups presenting a primary progressive aphasia variant and AD, 12 subjects with svPPA, 6 with naPPA and 9 with lPPA were included, along with 21 subjects with AD. The subjects presenting a semantic deficit were clearly distinguished from the others by their results on the SMT-42 (svPPA: mean = 30.0 (5.9); lPPA: mean = 37.8 (3.3), d = 1.5, p = 0.002; naPPA: mean = 39.8 (1.9), d = 1.89, p = 0.001; AD: mean = 38.5 (2.4), d = 1.63, p < 0.001); (svPPA: median = 31; lPPA: median = 38, U = 9, p = 0.002; naPPA: median = 40.5, U = 1.5, p = 0.001; AD: median = 39, U = 13.5, p < 0.001).
Conclusion: The SMT-42 is simple, rapidly administered (3 minutes on average), easily scored and has good sensitivity, and it appears to be an effective tool for semantic screening in routine clinical practice.
Keywords: Semantic variant; primary progressive aphasia; screening; semantic memory; test.