Objective: Subjective cognitive complaints have been reported in women during perimenopause and the Everyday Memory Questionnaire - Revised (EMQ-R) has been recently evaluated as a standardized instrument to measure subjective cognitive changes. The purpose of this study was to identify potential cut-off points for the EMQ-R retrieval subscale and attentional subscale, and to assess the validity of these cut-off points in detecting objective cognitive changes associated with reported subjective cognitive complaints.
Method: After screening, 232 perimenopausal women were included in the analyses. The supervised classification and regression tree was applied to identify optimal cut-off points. Its performance was evaluated by the value of the receiver operating characteristics curve, sensitivity and specificity.
Results: Findings revealed that the optimal cut-off point for the attentional subscale was 7, and for the retrieval subscale was 13. Both cut-off points presented acceptable discrimination performance. An independent t-test indicated that both cut-off points were associated with significant differences in scores on neuropsychological measures of retrieval (episodic memory and verbal fluency) as well as neuropsychological measures of higher-level attention (working memory).
Conclusion: The identified cut-off points may be helpful for women to track or quantify their subjective experiences of brain fog or cognitive symptoms during the menopause transition.
Keywords: Perimenopause; attention; cognitive complaints; memory; women.