Background Socio-cognitive assessment in neurocognitive disorders (NCDs) is rare in clinical practice and no consensus exists as to a uniform operationalization of socio-cognitive measures for NCDs in memory clinics. The SIGNATURE initiative aims to optimize the use of socio-cognitive measures in memory clinics, defining expert recommendations. We report consortium guidelines for the use of socio-cognitive measures in NCDs based on available evidence from the literature and the current state of practices in memory clinics. Methods Using a Delphi consensus method supported by a literature review and the results of an international survey, 22 specialists defined recommendations for the context of use, relevance in NCD diagnosis, priorities for future research and facilitators/obstacles of socio-cognitive assessment in major and mild NCDs. Results Overall, panelists recommended social cognition testing in routine diagnostic assessment to evaluate both socio-cognitive and socio-behavioral alterations. A set of clinical, methodological, implementation and external factors facilitating or hampering the use of socio-cognitive tasks was identified. Conclusions This is the first focused endeavor to favor the implementation of socio-cognitive assessment, which is required by DSM-5 but seldom performed despite clear evidence of its clinical relevance for diagnosis and care. Our results provide an initial set of recommendations, refinable through the future actions of the SIGNATURE initiative. Future collaborative clinical research projects should overcome current limitations and foster the use of ecological and cross-culturally validated measures in clinics.
International consensus for the assessment of social cognition in neurocognitive disorders: framework definition and clinical recommendations of the SIGNATURE initiative / Dodich, Alessandra; Panzavolta, Andrea; Funghi, Giulia; Meli, Claudia; Festari, Cristina; Chatzikostopoulos, Thanos; Chicherio, Christian; Clarens, Florencia; De Oliveira, Fabricio Ferreira; Filardi, Marco; Ibanez, Agustin; Invernizzi, Laura; Lebouvier, Thibaud; Logroscino, Giancarlo; Macpherson, Sarah E.; Manca, Riccardo; Marra, Camillo; Matias-Guiu, Jordi A.; Montembeault, Maxime; Papagno, Costanza; Pomati, Simone; Possenti, Mario; Piguet, Olivier; Sacco, Leonardo; Schild, Ann-Katrin; Sollberger, Marc; Tábuas-Pereira, Miguel; Tsatali, Marianna; Tsolaki, Tsolaki; Berg, Esther Van Den; Cappa, Stefano F.; Bertoux, Maxime; Kumfor, Fiona; Stock, Jan Van Den; Boccardi, Marina; Welsh-Bohmer, Kathleen Anne; Cerami, Chiara; Consortium, Signature. - In: ALZHEIMER'S RESEARCH & THERAPY. - ISSN 1758-9193. - 18:6(2026). [10.1186/s13195-025-01908-2]
International consensus for the assessment of social cognition in neurocognitive disorders: framework definition and clinical recommendations of the SIGNATURE initiative
Dodich, Alessandra
;Funghi, Giulia;Meli, Claudia;Papagno, Costanza;Cappa, Stefano F.;
2026-01-01
Abstract
Background Socio-cognitive assessment in neurocognitive disorders (NCDs) is rare in clinical practice and no consensus exists as to a uniform operationalization of socio-cognitive measures for NCDs in memory clinics. The SIGNATURE initiative aims to optimize the use of socio-cognitive measures in memory clinics, defining expert recommendations. We report consortium guidelines for the use of socio-cognitive measures in NCDs based on available evidence from the literature and the current state of practices in memory clinics. Methods Using a Delphi consensus method supported by a literature review and the results of an international survey, 22 specialists defined recommendations for the context of use, relevance in NCD diagnosis, priorities for future research and facilitators/obstacles of socio-cognitive assessment in major and mild NCDs. Results Overall, panelists recommended social cognition testing in routine diagnostic assessment to evaluate both socio-cognitive and socio-behavioral alterations. A set of clinical, methodological, implementation and external factors facilitating or hampering the use of socio-cognitive tasks was identified. Conclusions This is the first focused endeavor to favor the implementation of socio-cognitive assessment, which is required by DSM-5 but seldom performed despite clear evidence of its clinical relevance for diagnosis and care. Our results provide an initial set of recommendations, refinable through the future actions of the SIGNATURE initiative. Future collaborative clinical research projects should overcome current limitations and foster the use of ecological and cross-culturally validated measures in clinics.| File | Dimensione | Formato | |
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