A new neuropsychologist to our site, they’re about 1 year post fellowship, was excited because we are able to get a Connors CPT up and running. They notes how helpful it would be for our adult ADHD evals. I was pretty confident that CPTs are not helpful for accurately discriminating between those that do and do not have ADHD. Definitely not as a stand alone measure and even in a bigger battery, it has questionable utility. Neuropsychology peers, do I have it wrong? Here are some of the citations that have stood out to me in the past below, but there are more certainly about other instruments, like the DIVAs performance when compared to other CPTs and how it’s more sensitive.
Baggio, S., Hasler, R., Giacomini, V., El-Masri, H., Weibel, S., Perroud, N., & Deiber, M.-P. (2019). Does the Continuous Performance Test Predict ADHD Symptoms Severity and ADHD Presentation in Adults? Journal of Attention Disorders, 24(6), 840-848.
https://doi.org/10.1177/1087054718822060 (Original work published 2020)
Callan, P. D., Swanberg, S., Weber, S. K., Eidnes, K., Pope, T. M., & Shepler, D. (2024). Diagnostic Utility of Conners Continuous Performance Test-3 for Attention Deficit/Hyperactivity Disorder: A Systematic Review. Journal of Attention Disorders, 28(6), 992-1007.
https://doi.org/10.1177/10870547231223727 (Original work published 2024)
@WisNeuro, not sure if you’re on this thread. Would appreciate your feedback.