Dementia Clinical Trial
Official title:
A Study of a Memory Intervention to Improve Medicine Adherence in Patients With Mild Cognitive Impairments and Family Caregiver Medication Administration
Background and Purpose: Previous studies indicate that baseline cognitive abilities,
especially prospective memory (PM) significantly influence medication adherence. However,
there are only three qualified intervention studies on adherences in persons with cognitive
impairment (PWCIs). In addition, family caregivers (FCGs) are often asked to assist PWCIs in
managing their medication but FCGs' medication administration hassles are not intensively
investigated. Therefore, the purpose of this project is to test the effectiveness and
efficacy of a theoretical-based multifaceted memory intervention on medication
administration and quality of life in PWCIs living at home and medication administration
hassle of their FCGs.
Study Design: This is a three-year project (2015, 8, 1-2018, 7, 31). The aims of the
first-year study are: 1.to develop a multifaceted memory intervention based on the paradigm
of prospective memory (PM); 2. to pilot test the feasibility of the multifaceted memory
intervention through a small randomized control trial. The aims of the second- to third year
study are: 3. to examine the effectiveness and efficacy of the intervention (a randomized
control trial). The intervention group will receive a cognitive impairment education,
medication adherence and memory strategies training, while the control group will receive
only the cognitive impairment education program. The duration of the intervention is one
month. There will be 4 data collections (baseline, post-intervention 2 4, 6 months). Sample
size estimation for the pilot study is 5 dyads for each group. Sample size for the
randomized clinical trial is 84 dyads (42 dyads per group). After the attrition rate (10%)
is counted, in total, there will be 200 cases (100 dyads). Implications of this project:
This three-year program can help to identify those who may benefit from memory training and
assist those who may be incompetent living in community. Also this program will extend the
current knowledge of the role of PM playing in medication adherence behavior and its
relationships with self awareness as well as everyday decision making among PWCIs. In
addition, health related professionals can improve PWCI's quality of care and reduce FCG
hassle by applying a theoretical guided practice for memory training.
These dyad participants are given more information and a follow up phone call to schedule a
home visit for initial screening(24<MMSE<27). During the home visit, the participants will
be given the consent forms and explanation of this project regarding the purpose, length of
data collection and the types of measures of this study. Investigator will use the
electronic monitoring system (EMS) developed by Professor Heh's lab, Chung Yuan Christian
University in the Phase I to monitor the medication adherence behavior and pilot test its
agreement with the pill count and the FCG observation diary. Investigator will apply for the
compensations for participants for who finish the initial adherence observation (4 weeks)
(baseline data collection). Those who are enrolled for the 6 month intervention phase will
receive additional compensation if funded.
The research assistants are those who received training in the previous project (MOST
102-2314-B-182-050-MY2) but investigator will recruit a new part-time research assistant, a
nursing master student, to receive a one-month training course, including: the purpose of
this study, the procedures for recruitment, test battery interview skills, the test battery
scoring system, data collection using the EMS, data download from the EMS, and basic
statistical techniques. Then the newly trained part-time assistant will go to the
participating sites for observing at least three PWCIs, practicing the interview skills with
dyads, and familiarize herself with the outpatient clinical operational system. The on-site
participant physicians in the memory disorder clinics will receive a written letter to
explain the purpose of this project and the eligible criteria for the dyads. These
physicians will help investigators to identify eligible dyads, while trained research
assistants will implement the intervention and education program. The part-time student
assistant is responsible for data collection.
The advantages of investigators team. The PI and most of the co-PIs come from the same
research lab-Healthy Aging Research Center, Cognitive and Behavioral Indices Lab, Chang Gung
University. This lab targets on populations such as normal older adults and those with
dementia and disability. Investigator have developed own assessment tools and platform used
to share the data such as the Prospective and Retrospective Memory Questionnaire (PRMQ). In
the future, Investigator may share imaging technology. Therefore, investigators team has the
advantages of integration of expertise. Interactions between experts will facilitate the
progress of this project. Specifically, Dr. Hsu (a neurologist) will provide the clinical
utility that ensures formal diagnosis and assessment for PWCIs. The external consultant (a
psychologist), Professor Hua, will assist in administering psychometric tests,
interpretation of data, and consultation on the content of intervention. Investigator have
international collaboration partners such as Professor Jersey Liang from the University of
Michigan, USA for longitudinal and experimental data analyses consultation and Dr. Heather
Wilkinson from Edinburgh University, UK to focus on the dementia friendly community issues.
Investigator hold monthly research meeting in the lab. Finally, the PI has research
collaboration with Professor Heh, Chung Yuan Christian University, on the work of
interactive mathematic training APP for MCI patients (Cheng et al., 2013). Based on this
foundation, Investigator will continue to develop the EMS in this project.
Phase 1 (1st year) procedures. After the dyads sign on the consented forms, Investigator
spend about 3 hours to collect demographic data, test battery and teach the dyads how to
move of patient's medication into the EMS box which contains a sensor to record when the
container is opened. Investigator tell the dyads that the box can help patients count their
medication pills and it must be used in each medication-taking event. Investigator also
teach FCGs how to fill out a medication diary with their observation of patients' medication
taking behavior. For those who have their own medication organizers, Investigator ask them
to move one of their medications into the system for consistent measure. The baseline
observation of medication adherence will last 4 weeks to screen out those who do not have
adherence problems which are defined as adherence is less than or equal to 90% of the
inter-dose interval over this 4-week medication monitoring period. The rationale for this
inclusion criterion is that other studies found that using the EMS introduces some novelty
that can initially boost adherence (Park et al., 1999). Since the EMS is new to the
participants who may experience this novelty, Investigator will adopt this stringent
criterion comparing with the general definition of medication adherence >= 80% the
inter-dose interval (Ho et al., 2014). At the end of 4 weeks, the trained part-time student
assistant will down load the medication adherence data and remove the system from the dyad's
house. If the PWCIs have multiple medications, Investigator will select only one
(prioritizing order: dementia treatment, antipsychotic medicine, antihypertensive medicine).
All the participant dyads will take turns to use the EMS system. During the first 6 months
of the first year, Investigator will develop the teaching material and a protocol for phase
I pilot study.
The intervention procedures in the pilot study consists of 5 stages: (1) initial home visit
for baseline data collection; (2) measurement of baseline adherence over 4 weeks; (3) random
assignment for eligible participants who sign on the informed consent forms to either
intervention group or the educational comparison group; (4) four weekly in-home nurse visit
to deliver the intervention or education control to the dyads; (5) adherence monitoring and
outcome measures (over a 6 month period)(Figure 3).
When the dyad participants are referred by the physicians, they will go through the
five-stage procedures to collect baseline data and 4-week adherence data (week 1 to week 4).
Then the dyads will be randomly assigned into one of the two conditions. Different trained
research assistants will conduct follow-up four-weekly in-home visits (week 5-8) to deliver
the intervention or the educational comparison. During the follow-up (week5-8) home visit,
research nurses assigned to the intervention group will review the recommended strategies
and tailor these strategies based on individual differences and difficulties in implementing
the strategies (Figure 3). Problem-solving will be used to help the dyads. This intervention
dose is similar to Kinsella et al. (2009) and Insel et al. (2013) but we include FCGs to
participate in this study and control for PWCIs' awareness levels and their medical decision
making capacity.
The fidelity of the intervention will be monitored by a PhD student, using a voice recorder
on the intervention nurse' interactions with the dyads. Investigator will track the fidelity
whether the intervention protocol is followed. Any difference from the intervention protocol
will be examined by reviewing the voice records. Fidelity in the education control group
will be monitored by the same procedures as well. To prevent loss of 5-month medication
adherence after the end of the 1 month intervention phase, a research assistant will conduct
home visits of the dyads every 2 months to download the medication adherence data from the
EMS and serve as a memory cue to remind the PWCIs to take their medication. This is a
strategy consist with investigator's PM theory as well as Insel et al. (2013) and may
strengthen the multifaceted memory intervention. However, the research assistant(s) making
visits will be careful not to discuss the intervention in both education and intervention
conditions.
Blindness. To avoid bias, the PI and the part-time student nurse who collect data as well as
the participating physicians can be blind to the condition status of the dyads. Investigator
will hire two research assistant(s): one to conduct the memory intervention and the other to
conduct the education intervention without inference from each other. These procedures can
ensure the double blindness in this project.
Feasibility Indicators for the Phase I-pilot study. The feasibility indicators for the pilot
study include the recruitment rate (60%), attrition rates (< 20%) (Polit et al., 2004), and
protocol completion rates (>80%) based on investigator's previous research experiences of
recruiting PWCIs into a multiple stimulation intervention through leisure activities.
;
Allocation: Randomized, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Single Blind (Subject), Primary Purpose: Supportive Care
Status | Clinical Trial | Phase | |
---|---|---|---|
Completed |
NCT05686486 -
Gentle Gymnastics and Relationship Between Family Caregivers and Residents With Dementia in Nursing Homes
|
N/A | |
Terminated |
NCT05451693 -
Outreach-ER: A Dementia Care Intervention Program
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05820919 -
Enhancing Sleep Quality for Nursing Home Residents With Dementia - R33 Phase
|
N/A | |
Enrolling by invitation |
NCT06040294 -
Dementia and Disability Simulation for College Nursing Students' Senior Activity Facilitation Skills
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT05114187 -
An Internet-Based Education Program for Care Partners of People Living With Dementia
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT06322121 -
Vascular Aspects in Dementia: Part 2
|
||
Active, not recruiting |
NCT03676881 -
Longitudinal Validation of a Computerized Cognitive Battery (Cognigram) in the Diagnosis of Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer's Disease
|
||
Completed |
NCT04426838 -
Cognitive Behavioral Therapy for Insomnia for the Dementia Caregiving Dyad
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT03462485 -
Pilot Study of the Effects of Playing Golf on People With Dementia
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT03677284 -
Managing Time With Dementia: Effects of Time Assistive Products in People With Dementia
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT03849937 -
Changing Talk Online (CHATO) Study
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT06284213 -
Biomarkers for Vascular Contributions to Cognitive Impairment and Dementia Consortium
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05579236 -
Cortical Disarray Measurement in Mild Cognitive Impairment and Alzheimer's Disease
|
||
Completed |
NCT05080777 -
Pilot Pragmatic Clinical Trial to Embed Tele-Savvy Into Health Care Systems
|
N/A | |
Completed |
NCT04571697 -
A Study of Comparing Rates of Dementia and Alzheimer's Disease in Participants Initiating Methotrexate Versus Those Initiating Anti-tumor Necrosis Factor (TNF)-Alpha Therapy
|
||
Completed |
NCT03583879 -
Using Gait Robotics to Improve Symptoms of Parkinson's Disease
|
N/A | |
Recruiting |
NCT06033066 -
Financial Incentives and Recruitment to the APT Webstudy
|
N/A | |
Active, not recruiting |
NCT05204940 -
Longitudinal Observational Biomarker Study
|
||
Recruiting |
NCT05684783 -
Dementia Champions in Homecare
|
||
Completed |
NCT03147222 -
Function Focused Care: Fracture Care at Home
|
N/A |