Domain-specific cognitive screening in acute first-ever stroke: a comparative study of the Oxford Cognitive Screen (OCS) and ACE-III.
Onur Tanglay, Dhruv Jhunjhnuwala, William Huynh
Abstract
Open AccessIntroduction: Post-stroke cognitive impairment (PSCI) is common and often under-recognized, particularly in the acute phase. Most cognitive screening tools provide only a global score, overlooking domain-specific deficits that influence functional recovery. The Addenbrooke's Cognitive Examination-III (ACE-III) is a comprehensive cognitive test whose utility for acute stroke patients remains under-studied. This study evaluated the diagnostic performance of the ACE-III against the stroke-specific Oxford Cognitive Screen (OCS) in detecting PSCI following first-ever stroke in the acute period. Methods: Patients with first-ever stroke and no history of cognitive impairment were prospectively assessed within seven days of onset using both the OCS and ACE-III. PSCI was defined by impairment in one or more cognitive domains on the OCS. The discriminatory capacity of the ACE-III for detecting PSCI was examined, and associations between specific cognitive deficits and functional dependence were analyzed. Results: The OCS detected PSCI in 70% of the 30 patients that were recruited. The ACE-III demonstrated good discriminatory capacity (AUC = 0.897); however, it failed to detect PSCI in five patients identified by the OCS, and misclassified two aphasic but cognitively intact patients as impaired. Two patients classified as impaired on ACE-III were deemed cognitively intact by OCS, underscoring its limitations in stroke populations. Standard and stroke-specific ACE-III cut-offs demonstrated suboptimal accuracy for acute screening. Conclusion: While ACE-III performs well at the group level, it may miss relevant cognitive impairment in the acute stroke setting. Domain-based, stroke-specific tools such as the OCS more reliably detect deficits and may offer greater clinical utility for early cognitive profiling and rehabilitation.