Introduction
In clinical and drug studies, different neuropsychometric tests are used. So far,
no empirical data have been published to compare studies using different tests. The
purpose of this study was to calculate a regression formula allowing a comparison
of cross-sectional and longitudinal data from three neuropsychometric tests that are
frequently used in drug studies (Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale, ADAS-cog; Syndrom
Kurz Test, SKT; Mini Mental State Examination, MMSE). Method: 177 patients with dementia according to ICD10 criteria were studied for the cross
sectional and 61 for the longitudinal analysis. Correlations and linear regressions
were calculated between tests. Significance was proven with ANOVA and t-tests using
the SPSS statistical package. Results: Significant Spearman correlations and slopes in the regression occurred in the cross
sectional analysis (ADAS-cog-SKT rs = 0.77, slope = 0.45, SKT-ADAS-cog slope =1.3, r2 = 0.59; ADAS-cog-MMSE r2 = 0.76, slope = -0.42, MMSE-ADAS-cog slope = -1.5, r2 = 0.64; MMSE-SKT rs = -0.79, slope = -0.87, SKT-MMSE slope = -0.71, r2 = 0.62; p<0.001 after Bonferroni correction; N = 177) and in the longitudinal analysis
(SKT-ADAS-cog, rs = 0.48, slope = 0.69, ADAS-cog-SKT slope = 0.69, p<0.001, r2 = 0.32, MMSE-SKT, rs = 0.44, slope = -0.41, SKT-MMSE, slope = -0.55, p<0.001, r2 = 0.21). Conclusions: The results allow calculation of ADAS-scores when SKT scores are given, and vice
versa. In longitudinal studies or in the course of the disease, scores assessed with
the ADAS-cog and the SKT may now be statistically compared. In all comparisons, bottom
and ceiling effects of the tests have to be taken into account.