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Clinical Trial Details — Status: Completed

Administrative data

NCT number NCT01979159
Other study ID # O1356-P
Secondary ID
Status Completed
Phase N/A
First received
Last updated
Start date October 21, 2013
Est. completion date December 22, 2017

Study information

Verified date March 2019
Source VA Office of Research and Development
Contact n/a
Is FDA regulated No
Health authority
Study type Interventional

Clinical Trial Summary

In order to determine if speech-language therapy has positive effect, reliable measurement tools are required to document outcomes. Currently, there is very limited information concerning the measurement of changes in speech production as a result of treatment for acquired apraxia of speech and aphasia. This study will obtain information concerning the reliability of several speech production measures over time. Thirty persons with chronic aphasia and apraxia of speech will be asked to provide speech samples in response to commonly used assessment tools on three sampling occasions so that the stability of measurements may be examined.

After establishment of appropriate outcome measures, a small, pilot treatment study will be conducted with four participants. The participants will receive a new treatment for aphasia and acquired apraxia of speech and outcomes will be measured relative to speech and language production.


Description:

A single group, repeated measures design will be used to obtain repeated speech samples from 30 persons with chronic acquired apraxia of speech and aphasia. Speech samples will be elicited using commonly employed motor speech assessment protocols; an initial sample, a sample one week following the initial sample, and a sample at four weeks following the initial sample. The following measures will be obtained from the samples: percent consonants correct, percent fluent utterances, and duration of utterance. Stability of the measures will be examined.

After the preceding measures have been analyzed, a series of four, single-subject experimental designs will be conducted. Four participants with chronic aphasia and apraxia of speech will receive a new treatment for aphasia and apraxia of speech applied sequentially to two sets of experimental picture picture stimuli. Outcomes will be measured in terms of speech production (measures described above) as well as in terms of language production.


Recruitment information / eligibility

Status Completed
Enrollment 4
Est. completion date December 22, 2017
Est. primary completion date December 30, 2016
Accepts healthy volunteers No
Gender All
Age group 21 Years to 75 Years
Eligibility Inclusion Criteria:

- Veterans or non Veterans with aphasia and apraxia of speech who reside in the Salt Lake City region (commutable),

- 12 months or more post stroke or other focal brain injury, no other neurological conditions,

- native English speakers, hearing adequate for experimental task (e.g., pass puretone screening at 35dB at 500, 1K, 2K Hz),

- non linguistic cognition within normal limits

Exclusion Criteria:

- less than 12 months post stroke,

- insufficient hearing, insufficient non linguistic cognitive skills,

- neurological conditions other than stroke,

- more than one stroke or brain injury

- unable to attend treatment in the Salt Lake City vicinity

Study Design


Related Conditions & MeSH terms


Intervention

Behavioral:
Combined Aphasia and Apraxia of Speech Treatment (CAAST)
Therapy is delivered in a face-to-face format. The therapist uses picture stimuli, verbal modeling, feedback, reinforcement, forward-chaining to increase verbal production. For speech errors that occur, the therapist uses modeling, feedback, reinforcement, simultaneous production, articulatory instruction, and repeated practice to improve articulation.

Locations

Country Name City State
United States VA Salt Lake City Health Care System, Salt Lake City, UT Salt Lake City Utah

Sponsors (1)

Lead Sponsor Collaborator
VA Office of Research and Development

Country where clinical trial is conducted

United States, 

References & Publications (3)

Bailey DJ, Blomgren M, DeLong C, Berggren K, Wambaugh JL. Quantification and Systematic Characterization of Stuttering-Like Disfluencies in Acquired Apraxia of Speech. Am J Speech Lang Pathol. 2017 Jun 22;26(2S):641-648. doi: 10.1044/2017_AJSLP-16-0108. — View Citation

Wambaugh JL, Wright S, Mauszycki SC, Nessler C, Bailey D. Combined aphasia and apraxia of speech treatment (CAAST): Systematic replications in the development of a novel treatment. Int J Speech Lang Pathol. 2018 Apr;20(2):247-261. doi: 10.1080/17549507.20 — View Citation

Wambaugh JL, Wright S, Nessler C, Mauszycki SC. Combined Aphasia and Apraxia of Speech Treatment (CAAST): effects of a novel therapy. J Speech Lang Hear Res. 2014 Dec;57(6):2191-207. doi: 10.1044/2014_JSLHR-L-14-0004. — View Citation

Outcome

Type Measure Description Time frame Safety issue
Primary Change in Language Content Production for Treated Stimuli: Effect Sizes (Magnitude of Change From Baseline to Follow-up) Correct Information Units (CIUs) is a measure of the amount of relevant content produced in connected language tallied according to operationalized criteria. CIU is not a test or scale - it is a measure that is applied to language samples - in this case, description of treated pictures. Participants described experimental pictures, responses were transcribed and CIUs counted. CIUs can range from 0 to an unlimited maximum. Effect sizes (ESs) were calculated as an indication of the magnitude of change in number of CIUs produced (pre treatment to post treatment. ESs can range from negative (poorer performance post-treatment) to positive values (better performance post-treatment), with larger positive values reflecting greater gains. Benchmarks are as follows: >11.14 = large, 11.13 - 6.56 = medium, 6.55 - 3.88 = small, <3.88 = negligible. Small to large ESs indicate production of measurably more CIUs in picture descriptions post-treatment. Larger the ES, the greater the change. Following completion of treatment at 6 weeks post
Primary Change in Production of Language Content for Untreated Sets - Generalization Measured in Effect Sizes Correct Information Units (CIUs) is a measure of the amount of relevant content produced in connected language tallied according to operationalized criteria. CIU is not a test or scale - it is a measure that is applied to language samples - in this case, description of untreated pictures. Participants described experimental pictures, responses were transcribed and CIUs counted. CIUs can range from 0 to an unlimited maximum. Effect sizes (ESs) were calculated as an indication of the magnitude of change in number of CIUs produced (pre treatment to post treatment. ESs can range from negative (poorer performance post-treatment) to positive values (better performance post-treatment), with larger positive values reflecting greater gains. Benchmarks are as follows: >9.53 = large, 9.52 - 5.52 = medium, 6.55 - 3.29 = small, <3.29 = negligible. Small to large ESs indicate production of measurably more CIUs in picture descriptions post-treatment. Larger the ES, the greater the change. baseline (prior to treatment) through follow-up at 6 weeks post treatment
Secondary Changes in Speech Intelligibility on the Assessment of Intelligibility of Dysarthric Speech Speech intelligibility (understandability of speech) was measured by having participants produce 50 words from the Assessment of Intelligibility of Dysarthric Speech (ASSIDS) Two speech-language (blinded) scored pre and post treatment ASSIDS samples. The percentage of words correctly understood was calculated for each participant. The ASSIDS is not a scale - it is a procedure for calculating intelligibility. Speech intelligibility can range from 0% to 100% intelligible (no words understood to all words understood). The higher the percentage, the better the speech is understood by the listener. Change in percent words intelligible has the potential to be a negative (reflecting a poor outcome of less intelligible speech) or positive (reflecting a good outcome of more intelligible speech). The maximum possible amount of gain in intelligibility for these 4 participants, based on their pretreatment performance, ranged from +2% to +25%. pre and post treatment - prior to the start of treatment and at 6 weeks following the completion of treatment
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