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Speech markers of Presymptomatic and Prodromal Huntington’s disease

A. Vogel, C. Chan, G. Stuart, P. Maruff, Y. Lie, J. Stout (Melbourne, Australia)

Meeting: 2022 International Congress

Abstract Number: 657

Keywords: Chorea (also see specific diagnoses, Huntingtons disease, etc): Clinical features, Chorea (also see specific diagnoses, Huntingtons disease, etc): Genetics, Dysarthria

Category: Huntington's Disease

Objective: To investigate the sensitivity of digital speech measures for detecting subtle cognitive-linguistic and fine motor features in people carrying the expanded HD gene, with and without symptoms.

Background: Clinical markers that show change in performance in people with Huntington’s disease (HD) during the presymptomatic and prodromal stages remain a target of investigation in clinical medicine. Alongside genetic and neuroimaging initiatives, digital speech analytics has shown promise as a sensitive clinical marker of premanifest HD.

Method: Speech data were acquired from 110 participants (55 people with the expanded HD gene including 16 presymptomatic HD; 16 prodromal HD; 14 early-stage HD; 9 mid-stage HD; and 55 matched healthy controls). Objective digital speech measures were derived from speech tasks that fit along a continuum of motor and cognitive complexity. Acoustic features quantified speakers’ articulatory agility, voice quality and speech-timing. Subjects also completed the tests of cognition and upper limb motor function.

Results: Some presymptomatic HD (furthest from disease onset) differed to healthy controls on the speech task bearing the largest cognitive load, monologue. Prodromal HD presented with reduced articulatory agility, reduced speech rate and longer and variable pauses. Speech agility correlated with poorer performance on the upper limb motor test.

Conclusion: Tasks with a mix of cognitive and motor demands differentiated premanifest HD from their matched control groups. Motor speech tasks alone did not differentiate groups until participants were relatively closer to disease onset or symptomatic. Data demonstrated how ubiquitous behaviors like speech, when analyzed objectively, provide insight into disease related change.

Slide1

References: Chan JCS, Stout JC, Vogel AP. Speech in prodromal and symptomatic Huntington’s disease as a model of measuring onset and progression in dominantly inherited neurodegenerative diseases. Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews 2019;107:450-460.
Vogel AP, Shirbin C, Churchyard AJ, Stout JC. Speech acoustic markers of early stage and prodromal Huntington’s disease: A marker of disease onset? Neuropsychologia 2012;50(14):3273-3278.

To cite this abstract in AMA style:

A. Vogel, C. Chan, G. Stuart, P. Maruff, Y. Lie, J. Stout. Speech markers of Presymptomatic and Prodromal Huntington’s disease [abstract]. Mov Disord. 2022; 37 (suppl 2). https://www.mdsabstracts.org/abstract/speech-markers-of-presymptomatic-and-prodromal-huntingtons-disease/. Accessed June 14, 2025.
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