There are several well validated commercially
inhibitor available CPT tests such as the TOVA (Test of Variables of Attention11), IVA (Integrated Visual and Auditory12), ACPT (Auditory CPT13) and the Conner’s CPT.14 These tests are one of the most popular clinic-based measures to assess sustained attention in children;15 with several studies and a meta-analyses showing that children with ADHD perform worse on these tasks than children without ADHD.16 CPTs have also been shown to be a sensitive measure of medication effects.17 Several studies have noted improvement in CPT scores in children with ADHD on stimulant medication.15 18–20 However, little research has compared CPT scores with more subjective measurements of ADHD7 and in their recent review Ogundele et al7 recommended
further research in the use of CPTs compared to standard practice to determine cost-effectiveness of these tasks. A significant limitation of the CPT for the assessment of ADHD is that it does not measure the patients’ activity levels, which is a core symptom domain of ADHD. Approaches to the objective measurement of activity in ADHD have included wrist-worn actigraphy devices and infra-red motion capture. QbTest QbTest (Qbtech Ltd) has been developed to combine a CPT to measure attention and impulsivity with infra-red motion capture of head movement during the CPT to measure activity.21 The QbTest CPT requires participants to respond to an infrequently presented stimulus (by pressing a button) but ignore all others. Physical activity is measured during the course of the CPT via an infra-red camera that tracks the path of a reflector attached to the participants head (central midpoint). These elements of the test provide
information on each of the three symptom domains of ADHD and provide summary scores for each individual based on deviation from a normative data set based on age group and gender. There are two versions of the task for children and young people; the task for 6–11-year olds is 15 min duration and the task for 12–17-year olds is 20 min duration. The QbTest result is complemented by a clinical evaluation and behavioural Brefeldin_A observation of events that may affect test performance. The QbTest is not a stand-alone diagnostic tool, but has been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration (FDA; Ref: K133382) to supplement standard clinical assessment and treatment follow-up by reducing reliance on measures such as subjective observer reports (which can be biased, incomplete or missing) and augment clinical decision-making. The data available about the QbTest has shown favourable psychometric characteristics with child participants.