TY - JOUR
T1 - High specificity of the medical symptom validity test in patients with very severe memory impairment
AU - Singhal, A.
AU - Green, P.
AU - Ashaye, K.
AU - Shankar, K.
AU - Gill, D.
N1 - Original article can be found at : http://acn.oxfordjournals.org/ Copyright Oxford University Press [Full text of this article is not available in the UHRA]
PY - 2009
Y1 - 2009
N2 - Failure on effort tests usually implies insufficient effort to produce valid cognitive test scores. However, many people with very severe cognitive impairment, such as dementia patients, will produce failing scores on nearly all effort tests. In such patients, effort tests have low specificity. The Medical Symptom Validity Test (MSVT) and the nonverbal MSVT (NV-MSVT) were designed to address this problem. They produce profiles of scores across multiple subtests to facilitate discrimination between low scores from people trying to feign impairment and low scores attributable to severe impairment. To study the specificity of the MSVT and NV-MSVT in people with very severe memory impairment, we tested (a) 10 institutionalized patients with dementia and (b) 10 volunteers who were asked to simulate memory impairment. It was hypothesized that the “possible dementia profile” would be found significantly more often in the dementia patients than in the simulators. The MSVT and the NV-MSVT both displayed 100% specificity in the dementia group, while retaining a combined sensitivity of 80% to suboptimal effort in the simulator group.
AB - Failure on effort tests usually implies insufficient effort to produce valid cognitive test scores. However, many people with very severe cognitive impairment, such as dementia patients, will produce failing scores on nearly all effort tests. In such patients, effort tests have low specificity. The Medical Symptom Validity Test (MSVT) and the nonverbal MSVT (NV-MSVT) were designed to address this problem. They produce profiles of scores across multiple subtests to facilitate discrimination between low scores from people trying to feign impairment and low scores attributable to severe impairment. To study the specificity of the MSVT and NV-MSVT in people with very severe memory impairment, we tested (a) 10 institutionalized patients with dementia and (b) 10 volunteers who were asked to simulate memory impairment. It was hypothesized that the “possible dementia profile” would be found significantly more often in the dementia patients than in the simulators. The MSVT and the NV-MSVT both displayed 100% specificity in the dementia group, while retaining a combined sensitivity of 80% to suboptimal effort in the simulator group.
KW - Alzheimer's disease
KW - malingering/symptom validity testing
KW - forensic neuropsychology
KW - learning and memory
KW - dementia
KW - mild cognitive impairment
U2 - 10.1093/arclin/acp074
DO - 10.1093/arclin/acp074
M3 - Article
SN - 0887-6177
VL - 24
SP - 721
EP - 728
JO - Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology
JF - Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology
IS - 8
ER -