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Utility of Instrumented Timed Up and Go Test to Estimate Disease Severity in Huntington Disease.

D. Wani, M. Lin, C. Macpherson, T. Ravikumar, M. Campbell, L. Muratori, N. Fritz, L. Quinn (New York, USA)

Meeting: 2024 International Congress

Abstract Number: 524

Keywords: Familial neurodegenerative diseases, Rehabilitation, Timed Up and Go test

Category: Allied Healthcare Professionals

Objective: To investigate the utility of Instrumented Timed Up and Go (TUG) test to estimate disease severity in people with Huntington Disease (PwHD).

Background: Huntington disease (HD) is a progressive neurodegenerative disease with motor, cognitive, and behavioral impairments.[1] Only a few measures of balance and mobility are available that can estimate disease severity and determine treatment effectiveness in PwHD.[2], [3] TUG and cognitive dual-task TUG (TUG-Cog) are clinical performance measures that have shown potential for monitoring the progression of similar neurodegenerative diseases.[4] This study aimed to (1) compare TUG and TUG-Cog performance among PwHDs and non-HD peers and (2) examine the association of TUG and TUG-Cog parameters with disease severity in PwHD.

Method: 50 PwHD across early and middle disease stages (53.8 ± 11.6 yrs; 28 males, Total Functional Capacity score= 9.58 ± 2.25) and 35 non-HD peers (50.3 ± 12.8 yrs; 15 males) completed TUG and TUG-Cog wearing IMU sensors in a single session. The Unified Huntington Disease Rating Scale-Total Motor Score (TMS) was collected from PwHD.[5] We used two-way ANOVA to compare the total duration required to complete TUG and TUG-Cog by both groups. We ran regression analyses to identify TUG and TUG-Cog parameters that can predict disease severity as measured by TMS. TUG and TUG-Cog parameters included in analyses were total duration, sit-to-stand duration, sit-to-stand lean angle, turn-angle degrees, turn duration, turn-turn velocity, along with age and sex.

Results: Both groups’ performance deteriorated while completing TUG-Cog compared to TUG (p = 0.002), with PwHD taking longer than non-HD peers to complete both tests (p ≤ 0.001). TUG parameters explained only 11.2% of the variance in TMS (p > 0.05), whereas TUG-Cog parameters explained 44% of the variance in TMS (p < 0.001). The coefficients of sex (1.74), sit-to-stand duration (3.43), and turn duration (-3.78) during TUG-Cog indicated their potential to be predictors for HD severity.

Conclusion: The differences between PwHD and non-HD peers on TUG and TUG-Cog indicate that both tests are sensitive clinical performance measures for HD status. TUG-Cog parameters showed a stronger association with disease severity among PwHD than TUG, indicating that TUG-Cog can be used to identify complex motor–cognitive impairments and to estimate disease severity among PwHD.[6]

References: The above abstract was submitted for the APTA CSM 2024 conference, and a poster was presented at the APTA CSM conference on February 16, 2024.

[1]L. Quinn and M. Busse, “The role of rehabilitation therapy in Huntington disease,” Handbook of Clinical Neurology, vol. 144, pp. 151–165, 2017.
[2]L. Quinn et al., “Reliability and minimal detectable change of physical performance measures in individuals with pre-manifest and manifest Huntington disease,” Physical therapy, vol. 93, no. 7, pp. 942–956, 2013.
[3]L. Quinn, D. Kegelmeyer, A. Kloos, A. K. Rao, M. Busse, and N. E. Fritz, “Clinical recommendations to guide physical therapy practice for Huntington disease,” Neurology, vol. 94, no. 5, pp. 217–228, 2020.
[4]A. Christopher, E. Kraft, H. Olenick, R. Kiesling, and A. Doty, “The reliability and validity of the Timed Up and Go as a clinical tool in individuals with and without disabilities across a lifespan: A systematic review: Psychometric properties of the Timed Up and Go,” Disability and rehabilitation, vol. 43, no. 13, pp. 1799–1813, 2021.
[5]T. A. Mestre et al., “Rating scales for motor symptoms and signs in Huntington’s disease: critique and recommendations,” Movement disorders clinical practice, vol. 5, no. 2, pp. 111–117, 2018.
[6]L. M. Muratori, L. Quinn, X. Li, G. Youdan, M. Busse, and N. E. Fritz, “Measures of postural control and mobility during dual-tasking as candidate markers of instability in Huntington’s disease,” Human Movement Science, vol. 80, p. 102881, 2021.

To cite this abstract in AMA style:

D. Wani, M. Lin, C. Macpherson, T. Ravikumar, M. Campbell, L. Muratori, N. Fritz, L. Quinn. Utility of Instrumented Timed Up and Go Test to Estimate Disease Severity in Huntington Disease. [abstract]. Mov Disord. 2024; 39 (suppl 1). https://www.mdsabstracts.org/abstract/utility-of-instrumented-timed-up-and-go-test-to-estimate-disease-severity-in-huntington-disease/. Accessed June 14, 2025.
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