Oculometric Assessment of Sensorimotor Impairment Associated with Liver Disease Is as Sensitive as Standard of Care Cognitive Tests.
Oculometric Assessment of Sensorimotor Impairment Associated with Liver Disease Is as Sensitive as Standard of Care Cognitive Tests. Geriatrics (Basel, Switzerland) 2025; 10 (4)Abstract
Hepatic encephalopathy (HE) occurs in 20-80% of patients with liver cirrhosis, impacting attention, memory, processing speed, and visuospatial skills. HE standard-of-care psychometric assessments are time-consuming and require staff training. Oculometrics may provide a fast, non-invasive brain health assessment that can be self-administered in a medical environment.We investigated whether an oculometric assessment could measure the severity of HE as accurately as standard-of-care psychometric methods.Forty-eight participants (19 with decompensated cirrhosis, 10 with compensated cirrhosis, 19 controls) completed a previously validated five-minute oculometric test and the standard-of-care psychometric hepatic encephalopathy (PHE) battery. The oculometric test consists of following a dot as it moves across a computer screen and generates 10 metrics including a summary score called nFit. The PHE battery entails five standard cognitive tests, generating seven metrics including a PHE composite score (PHES).The oculometric summary score, nFit, correlated with the current diagnostic standard, the PHES (r = 0.51, p < 0.001), the presence or absence of HE as determined by PHES composite (r = -0.44, p < 0.001), as well as the severity of cirrhosis (r = -0.59, p < 0.001). Additionally, performance on both nFit and PHES distinguished compensated (ROC: nFit: 0.71, PHES: 0.68) and decompensated (ROC: nFit: 0.88, PHES: 0.85) patient groups from control participants comparably. Finally, compared to participants with decompensated cirrhosis, control participants had better scores for almost all oculometrics: acceleration, catch-up saccade amplitude, proportion smooth, direction noise, and speed noise.Patients with liver disease showed impairment on multiple aspects of visual processing compared to a control group. These functional visual processing impairments correlate with the presence or absence of HE, showing significant sensitivity in distinguishing people with HE from controls. Oculometric tests provide a quick, non-invasive functional assessment of brain health in patients with liver disease, with sensitivity indistinguishable from standard-of-case psychometric tests.
View details for DOI 10.3390/geriatrics10040112
View details for PubMedID 40863579
View details for PubMedCentralID PMC12385179