TY - JOUR
T1 - Investigating the test of Premorbid Functioning (TOPF) in predicting Wechsler abbreviated scale of intelligence
T2 - Second edition (WASI-II) scores in an Australian sample
AU - Thomas, M. D.
AU - Sugden, N.
AU - McGrath, A.
AU - Rohr, P.
AU - Weekes, C
AU - Skilbeck, C. E.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2020 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2022/7
Y1 - 2022/7
N2 - Accurate prediction of premorbid functioning is important in neuropsychological assessment. We aimed to investigate the predictive accuracy of the TOPF and examine this word list at an item level against WASI-II scores, using Australian pronunciations. The sample of 219 healthy Australians were aged 18?82 years. Multiple regression analyses were used to replicate the TOPF and simple demographic models based on the US TOPF standardization. Rasch analyses provided a comparison of Australian, US and UK word order from the proportion of words pronounced correctly. The variance explained in WASI-II index scores ranged from R2=.12 (PRI) to .33 (FSIQ-2), which was approximately half that reported in the US standardization study. The accuracy of predicted WASI-II scores was also slightly less in our sample. Thirty-two words were out of place by five places or more compared with the US word order and 30 compared with the UK. These results add to concerns about the application the TOPF with norms developed in the US and UK in the Australian context. Clinicians are advised not to apply the five error discontinue rule when using the TOPF in the local context. Development of a more accurate word reading task for use in Australia is warranted.
AB - Accurate prediction of premorbid functioning is important in neuropsychological assessment. We aimed to investigate the predictive accuracy of the TOPF and examine this word list at an item level against WASI-II scores, using Australian pronunciations. The sample of 219 healthy Australians were aged 18?82 years. Multiple regression analyses were used to replicate the TOPF and simple demographic models based on the US TOPF standardization. Rasch analyses provided a comparison of Australian, US and UK word order from the proportion of words pronounced correctly. The variance explained in WASI-II index scores ranged from R2=.12 (PRI) to .33 (FSIQ-2), which was approximately half that reported in the US standardization study. The accuracy of predicted WASI-II scores was also slightly less in our sample. Thirty-two words were out of place by five places or more compared with the US word order and 30 compared with the UK. These results add to concerns about the application the TOPF with norms developed in the US and UK in the Australian context. Clinicians are advised not to apply the five error discontinue rule when using the TOPF in the local context. Development of a more accurate word reading task for use in Australia is warranted.
KW - Test of Premorbid functioning (TOPF)
KW - Wechsler Abbreviated Scale of Intelligence–second edition (WASI-II)
KW - Premorbid neuropsychological functioning
KW - Cognitive assessment
KW - Psychometric evaluation
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U2 - 10.1080/09602011.2020.1842213
DO - 10.1080/09602011.2020.1842213
M3 - Article
C2 - 33200652
SN - 1464-0694
VL - 32
SP - 847
EP - 871
JO - Neuropsychological Rehabilitation
JF - Neuropsychological Rehabilitation
IS - 6
ER -