Clinical Trial Details
— Status: Completed
Administrative data
NCT number |
NCT02557464 |
Other study ID # |
15-AOI-04 |
Secondary ID |
|
Status |
Completed |
Phase |
N/A
|
First received |
|
Last updated |
|
Start date |
November 10, 2015 |
Est. completion date |
July 5, 2018 |
Study information
Verified date |
November 2023 |
Source |
Centre Hospitalier Universitaire de Nice |
Contact |
n/a |
Is FDA regulated |
No |
Health authority |
|
Study type |
Interventional
|
Clinical Trial Summary
The objective of this study is to identify early and accurate semantics markers of
Alzheimer's disease (AD) by using two types of methods. First, the investigator will evaluate
semantic processing of patients with AD or related disorders which will be compared to age
matched controls by taking neuropsychological tests. Then, the investigator will analyze the
effect of contextual word predictability on eye movements in reading sentences with the help
of the same participants by using an eye tracker. Both of these methods will be used twice
with a time interval of 6 months.
Description:
Scientific background:
Identifying Alzheimer's disease (AD) as early as possible should enable to propose a
re-education platform that would fit the early stage of neuronal loss in this pathology.
Neuropsychological evaluations are currently one of the main tools for the early screening of
AD. Among the tests proposed during those evaluations, the investigator find the Isaacs Set
Test which evaluates the early degradation of semantic memory. Whereas eyes movement behavior
during reading is sensitive to semantics factors and allows collecting accurate measurements
(as precisely as one millisecond), no study has yet used this technique to precisely identify
the precocious semantics troubles of AD.
Goal:
The objective of this study is to identify early and accurate markers of AD by associating
semantic neuropsychological assessments and eye tracking during sentences reading.
Method:
The study will include 24 patients with AD or related disorders (Mini Mental State
Examination between 20 and 27 ) and 24 age matched controls participants. The experiment will
be divided in two steps. First, patients will take a standard neuropsychological evaluation.
A specific semantic analysis will be performed on each participant using, for example, the
Isaacs Set Test or the Weschler Similarities. The second step will ask the participants to
read sentences while an eye tracker (the Eye Link 1000 remote) will record their eyes
movements. In order to manipulate semantics factors, each sentence will contain a target
word, either predictable or not. The experiment will last one hour and a half.
Neuropsychological assessments and eye tracking will be done twice with a time interval of 6
months. The two times will be called T1 and T2 and are required to estimate whether eye
tracking is a better predictor of AD than neuropsychological tests or not.
Evaluation criteria:
The eye tracking technique enables to record different sorts of measures. More specifically,
the investigator will evaluate gaze duration on the target word. Moreover, neuropsychological
tests scores will be collected. It will be, for example, the number of good answers.
Hypothesis and expected results:
First, the investigator expect that the predictability effect on eye movements would be less
pronounced for patients with AD or related disorders than for the control group. This effect
would be even more diminished at T2. It could be explained by a progressive degradation of
the semantic memory of patients. Then, and for the same reasons, the investigator expect that
the scores collected from the neuropsychological tests would be pathological for patient
suffering from AD or related disorders. The test scores would be even more in deficit at T2.
Finally, the investigator predict a correlation between neuropsychological tests data and eye
movements data. With an extrapolation, and because eye movements recording allow us to obtain
more accurate information about the quality of semantic processes, the investigator formulate
the hypothesis that this technique will help to predict earlier AD.