# Executive anosognosia in progressive supranuclear palsy versus Parkinson’s disease

**Authors:** L. Ye, L. Seidler, D. Chemodanow, G. Respondek, C. Niesmann, I. Wilkens, M. Klietz, G. U. Höglinger, B. Kopp

PMC · DOI: 10.3389/fneur.2026.1744979 · 2026-02-02

## TL;DR

The study compares executive anosognosia, or unawareness of cognitive deficits, in patients with progressive supranuclear palsy and Parkinson’s disease, finding it more severe in PSP.

## Contribution

The paper identifies executive anosognosia as a distinguishing feature of PSP, emphasizing the importance of objective assessments over patient self-reports.

## Key findings

- PSP patients showed greater executive anosognosia compared to PD patients.
- Informant reports reduced but did not eliminate underreporting in PSP.
- Patient-reported executive difficulties in PSP were linked to depression, not actual cognitive performance.

## Abstract

Executive function deficits are common among patients with Parkinson’s disease (PD) and progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP). Executive function refers to higher-order cognitive processes thought to involve fronto-striatal circuits. Some patients with executive deficits may be unable to recognize or report them, a condition we refer to as executive anosognosia.

To conduct a comparative analysis of executive anosognosia in patients diagnosed with PSP and PD.

We compared an objective neuropsychological assessment (ONA) of composite executive function (ONA-CEF), which includes semantic and phonemic verbal fluency, as well as two sub-scores from the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test, with patient- and informant-reported rating scales. We used the Dysexecutive Questionnaire Revised (DEX-R) to evaluate near-transfer executive complaints and the Aachen Activity and Participation Index: Cognition and Participation (AAPI-CP) composite to evaluate far-transfer cognitive and social difficulties. Discrepancy indices were calculated for patients and informants (ONA-CEF minus DEX-R and ONA-CEF minus AAPI-CP).

PSP patients had significantly larger negative discrepancies than PD patients, indicating stronger executive anosognosia. Although informant reports reduced these discrepancies, significant underreporting persisted in PSP informants. Correlational analyses revealed that patient-reported DEX-R difficulties were strongly correlated with depressive symptoms (r ≈ 0.65) but not with objective executive performance (r ≈ 0.00).

Executive anosognosia is a marker of PSP, highlighting the need for objective neuropsychological assessments in clinical trials. PSP patients’ reports of executive dysfunction are more associated with mood than actual impairment, which challenges the validity of patient-reported outcomes in PSP and related neurological diseases.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** Parkinson’s disease (MONDO:0005180), progressive supranuclear palsy (MONDO:0019037)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** depressive symptoms (MESH:D003866), cognitive and social difficulties (OMIM:300082), executive dysfunction (MESH:D006331), Executive anosognosia (MESH:D000377), PSP (MESH:D013494), Executive function deficits (MESH:D001289), neurological diseases (MESH:D020271), executive deficits (MESH:D009461), PD (MESH:D010300)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Figures

1 figure with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12907162/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12907162