Challenges in measuring the effects of pharmacological interventions on cognitive and adaptive functioning in individuals with Down syndrome: A systematic review.

Abstract

We systematically reviewed the measures used in pharmaceutical trials in children/adults with Down syndrome without dementia. Our purpose was to identify developmentally appropriate outcome measures capable of detecting changes in cognitive and adaptive functioning in this population. Eleven studies were included and used diverse outcome measures across the domains of language, memory, attention, behavior, and executive/adaptive functioning. Our results highlight the challenges in selecting measures capable of capturing improvements in pharmaceutical trials in individuals with DS. We offer suggestions to enhance future research, including: conducting studies with larger samples of participants with a range of developmental abilities; modifying existing/developing novel outcome measures; incorporating advances from related areas and DS observational studies; and considering alternative analytic techniques to characterize treatment effects.

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Citation

Published Version (Please cite this version)

10.1002/ajmg.a.38416

Publication Info

Keeling, Lori A, Gail A Spiridigliozzi, Sarah J Hart, Jane A Baker, Harrison N Jones and Priya S Kishnani (2017). Challenges in measuring the effects of pharmacological interventions on cognitive and adaptive functioning in individuals with Down syndrome: A systematic review. American journal of medical genetics. Part A, 173(11). pp. 3058–3066. 10.1002/ajmg.a.38416 Retrieved from https://hdl.handle.net/10161/27304.

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Scholars@Duke

Spiridigliozzi

Gail A. Spiridigliozzi

Professor in Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences

Cholinergic therapy in children and adolescents with Down syndrome; premutation carriers of fragile X syndrome; cognitive development of children with infantile-onset Pompe disease who are being treated with enzyme replacement therapy.

Jones

Harrison N. Jones

Associate Professor of Head and Neck Surgery & Communication Sciences

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