Frequency of low ImPACT scores among adolescent and young adult student-athletes with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder and/or learning disorder

Front Neurol. 2024 Nov 19:15:1446962. doi: 10.3389/fneur.2024.1446962. eCollection 2024.

Abstract

Introduction: Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by attention problems, excessive activity, and impulsivity - occurring in approximately 13% of children 12-17 years of age, and as many as 16% of older adolescents 18-22 years of age, with a greater prevalence in boys than girls. ADHD frequently co-occurs with specific learning disorder (LD), a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by difficulties learning and using academic skills, such as reading, writing, and mathematics. Taken together, ADHD and/or LD are common among high school students and college students and can influence performance on computerized tests used in concussion management. However, normative data for widely used computer-based measures used in concussion management do not include reference samples with ADHD and/or LD. Previous research has documented the expected frequency of obtaining low scores on computer-based neuropsychological test measures among healthy, uninjured individuals, but few studies have examined the frequency of obtaining low scores in athletes with neurodevelopmental diagnoses, such as ADHD and/or LD. This study examined the frequency of low scores (i.e., multivariate base rates) on the Immediate Post-Concussion Assessment and Cognitive Test (ImPACT) for youth and young adults with self-reported ADHD and/or LD.

Methods: The sample included 174,878 adolescent and young adult student-athletes who completed pre-season baseline neurocognitive assessments, who were assigned to the following independent groups: ADHD only (n = 45,215), LD only (n = 54,223), ADHD and LD (n = 45,737), No ADHD or LD (n = 47,684; "control athletes").

Results: Base rates of low scores were stratified by high school (e.g., 13-18) and collegiate age (e.g., 19-22) and sex. It was common for student athletes (all ages) with LD alone (i.e., 30-37%), or with both ADHD and LD (i.e., 24-31%), to obtain at least two low ImPACT composite scores, but not three low composite scores. However, it was relatively uncommon for control athletes (those without ADHD or LD) (i.e., 12-14%) or older athletes (ages 19-22) with ADHD (i.e., 14-15%) to obtain two (or more) low scores.

Discussion: Having information relating to the base rates of low scores among uninjured athletes enhances the interpretation of ImPACT results among the broader population of student-athletes with and without neurodevelopmental disorders.

Keywords: attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder; concussion; impact; learning disorder; multivariate base rates; neurocognitive.

Grants and funding

The author(s) declare that no financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.