Validation of the Remote Automated ki:e Speech Biomarker for Cognition in Mild Cognitive Impairment: Verification and Validation following DiME V3 Framework

  • Johannes Tröger*
  • , Ebru Baykara
  • , Jian Zhao
  • , Daphne Ter Huurne
  • , Nina Possemis
  • , Elisa Mallick
  • , Simona Schäfer
  • , Louisa Schwed
  • , Mario Mina
  • , Nicklas Linz
  • , Inez Ramakers
  • , Craig Ritchie
  • *Corresponding author for this work

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

17 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Introduction: Progressive cognitive decline is the cardinal behavioral symptom in most dementia-causing diseases such as Alzheimer's disease. While most well-established measures for cognition might not fit tomorrow's decentralized remote clinical trials, digital cognitive assessments will gain importance. We present the evaluation of a novel digital speech biomarker for cognition (SB-C) following the Digital Medicine Society's V3 framework: verification, analytical validation, and clinical validation. Methods: Evaluation was done in two independent clinical samples: the Dutch DeepSpA (N = 69 subjective cognitive impairment [SCI], N = 52 mild cognitive impairment [MCI], and N = 13 dementia) and the Scottish SPeAk datasets (N = 25, healthy controls). For validation, two anchor scores were used: the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) and the Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) scale. Results: Verification: The SB-C could be reliably extracted for both languages using an automatic speech processing pipeline. Analytical Validation: In both languages, the SB-C was strongly correlated with MMSE scores. Clinical Validation: The SB-C significantly differed between clinical groups (including MCI and dementia), was strongly correlated with the CDR, and could track the clinically meaningful decline. Conclusion: Our results suggest that the ki:e SB-C is an objective, scalable, and reliable indicator of cognitive decline, fit for purpose as a remote assessment in clinical early dementia trials.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)107-116
Number of pages10
JournalDigital Biomarkers
Volume6
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 30 Sept 2022
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Clinical trials
  • Dementia
  • Digital biomarker
  • Mild cognitive impairment
  • Speech analysis
  • Speech biomarker

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