Decline in Processing Speed Tells Only Half the Story: Developmental Delay in Children Living with Sickle Cell Disease.
Volume: 11
Issue: 3
Year of Publication:
Abstract summary
Children with sickle cell disease (SCD) may experience cognitive difficulties, including slowed processing speed. Thus, we investigated if processing speed changes over time. From 1992-2001, 103 participants with SCD aged 3-16 years (n ≤ 8.99 = 45; n ≥ 9.00 = 58) completed cognitive assessments. MRI was available for 54 participants. Between 1992-2002, 58 participants consented to one or two further assessments. A repeated measures regression using linear mixed-effects modelling determined longitudinal changes in processing speed index (PSI), examining the interaction between age (continuous variable) and timepoint (i.e., assessment 1 or 3) and controlling for MRI infarct status (i.e., no infarct, silent infarct, or stroke). Those aged ≤8.99 and ≥9.00 at first assessment experienced PSI decline. Declines were most prominent for the processing speed coding subtest, with a significant interaction between timepoint and age, (31) = 2.64, = 0.01. This decline may reflect a developmental delay, likely due to disease progression, with slower improvements in processing speed. Although there have been significant improvements in SCD treatments, mostly in high-income countries, processing speed still remains a target; thus, incorporating clinical monitoring of processing speed may help identify delay and allow for early intervention.Study Outcome
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Statistics
Citations : Rees D.C., Williams T.N., Gladwin M.T. Sickle-Cell Disease. Lancet. 2010;376:2018–2031. doi: 10.1016/S0140-6736(10)61029-X.Authors : 3
Identifiers
Doi : 277SSN : 2227-9067