Dementia Clinical Trial
Official title:
Creating Physical Objects With 3D Printers to Stimulate Reminiscing for Memory Loss [2 R44 AG049548-02A1]
In 2013 an estimated 5 million people age 65 and older had Alzheimer's disease. Longer life spans and aging baby boomers will cause this number to grow rapidly. More than 50% of residents in assisted living and nursing homes have some form of dementia or cognitive impairment and the number is increasing every day. As a form of person-centered, non-pharmacological dementia care, Reminiscence Therapy (RT) holds considerable promise. Improvements in mood, quality of life, social interaction, cognition, memory and a reduction in caregiver stress have been noted. This project will develop an operational model for identifying and producing 3D personal objects using 3D printing technology, and deploying them for use in RT. The research also will evaluate the effectiveness of using 3D-printed objects in RT compared to other types of memory stimuli. This novel approach to the "personalization" of reminiscence therapy will result in better social and mental health outcomes for individuals with dementia.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 150 |
Est. completion date | November 30, 2022 |
Est. primary completion date | November 30, 2022 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | N/A and older |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: 1. English speaking 2. Physician diagnosis of early-stage Alzheimer's disease or mild cognitive impairment 3. Score of 10 or above on the brief St. Louis University Mental Status examination (SLUMS). Exclusion Criteria: - |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | University of Texas Arlington | Arlington | Texas |
United States | Saint Louis University | Saint Louis | Missouri |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Moai Technologies LLC | St. Louis University, University of Texas-Arlington |
United States,
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Garlinghouse A, Rud S, Johnson K, Plocher T, Klassen D, Havey T, Gaugler JE. Creating objects with 3D printers to stimulate reminiscence in memory loss: A mixed-method feasibility study. Inform Health Soc Care. 2018 Dec;43(4):362-378. doi: 10.1080/17538157.2017.1290640. Epub 2017 Aug 8. — View Citation
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* Note: There are 12 references in all — Click here to view all references
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Other | Functionality and usability of 3D printing mobile tools and paradigm for RT | Interviews will be conducted with all participating RT therapists and with a sample of 15-20 PWMLs who reported the greatest increase in autobiographical memory during the 16 week therapy period. A stratified sampling approach will be used to select the PWMLs for interviews and will consider dementia severity and racial or ethnic background. The experiences of caregiver/therapists and PWMLs with using the 3D printed objects in RT sessions and the online and mobile tools, will be assessed with both structured and open-ended questioning. Qualitative data, not quantitative measures, will result from the interviews. This is a standard practice in engineering to gather qualitative feedback on the software application that has been used in the field trial. | Interviews will be conducted at 16 weeks | |
Primary | Change in Cognitive stimulation/reminiscence | The Autobiographical Memory Interview (AMI) will be completed with PWMLs, a well-established method for assessing autobiographical memory (Kopelman, Wilson, Baddeley, 1989). Specifically, the AMI assesses the extent to which the PWML can recall memories related to factual, incident-specific information from their past. Higher scores indicate greater memory function. An audio recording will be made of the sessions. Later, a written verbal protocol record of each memory produced in the test session will be made from the audio recordings. These verbal protocol records each will be scored independently by two of our researchers. Scoring will be for richness and detail of the reminiscence and will follow the scoring guidelines provided in Kopelman, Wilson, and Baddeley [10]. Inter-rater reliability will be computed. Note that only one measure or score of reminiscence results from the AMI. | Will be administered at Week 0 (prior to first therapy session) to establish a baseline. Measures at Week 8 (midpoint of therapy sessions), and Week 16 (following last therapy session) will determine change from the baseline. | |
Secondary | Change in Dementia severity-SLUMS | The primary measure of dementia severity will be the Saint Louis University Mental Status (SLUMS) (Tariq, Tumosa, Chibnall, Perry, 2006). The SLUMS has 11 items, the scores on which are summed together to produce a total score. The maximum possible score is 30. Normal range for high school educated persons is 27-30 and for less than high school education is 25-30. Mild Neurocogntive Disorder is indicated by scores from 21-26 for high school educated persons and 20-24 for persons with less than high school education. Dementia is indicated by scores from 1-20 for high school educated persons and 1-19 for persons with less than high school education. | Will be administered at Week 0 (prior to first therapy session) to establish a baseline. Measures at Week 8 (midpoint of therapy sessions), and Week 16 (following last therapy session) will determine change from the baseline. | |
Secondary | Change in Dementia severity-Frequency of Behavioral Problems | The Revised Memory and Behavior Problems Checklist (R-MBPC) (Teri, Truax, Logsdon, Uomoto, Zarit, Vitaliano,1992) is a 24-item, caregiver-report measure of observable behavioral problems in dementia patients. It provides "yes-no" scores ("observed" or "not observed") for occurance of patient problems in 3 areas, memory, depression, and disruptive behaviors. It provides a second score for each item reflecting severity of the observed behavior, using a scale of 0-4. The Memory subscale has 7 items. Scores for each item are summed to give a possible subscale score range of 0-7 on occurance of the behavior and 0-28 on severity. Scores on the 9-item depression subscale are summed in the same way, giving a range from 0-9 on observed occurance and 0-36 on severity. The third subscale, Disruptive Behaviors, has 8 items, and when summed across the 8 items gives range of 0-8 for observed occurance and 0-32 for severity. | Will be administered at Week 0 (prior to first therapy session) to establish a baseline. Measures at Week 8 (midpoint of therapy sessions), and Week 16 (following last therapy session) will determine change from the baseline. | |
Secondary | Change in Dementia severity-dependence on assistance | The Katz Index of Independence in Activities of Daily Living rates 6 areas of daily living: bathing; dressing; toileting; transferring; continence, feeding. For each area, 1 point is assigned if no supervision, direction, or personal assistance is needed to perform the activity. For each area, a 0 is assigned if the activity can be performed only with supervision, direction, or personal assistance. Highest possible score is 6 indicating patient is independent. Lowest score is 0, indication patient is very dependent. | Will be administered at Week 0 (prior to first therapy session) to establish a baseline. Measures at Week 8 (midpoint of therapy sessions), and Week 16 (following last therapy session) will determine change from the baseline. | |
Secondary | Change in Social engagement | Pleasant Events/Social Engagement. RT therapists will complete the short form of the Pleasant Events Schedule-AD (PES-AD) for PWMLs (Logsdon and Teri, 1997). The PES-AD short form includes 20 items of events and activities for PWMLs. Items are rated according to their frequency during the past month on a 0-2-point scale: not at all (0), a few times (1), or often (2). Items are also rated 0 or 2 according to how much the patient now enjoys the activity: not at all (0), somewhat (1), or a great deal (2). To obtain an overall summary score for frequency of enjoyable activities, a cross-product of frequency and enjoyment is calculated for each item. Each item can have a score of 0-4. It receives a score of 0 if the patient either does not enjoy or hasn't done in the past month. It receives a score of 4 if the patient enjoys the activity a great deal and has done often. The sum of these item scores represents the frequency of pleasant activities during the past month. | Will be administered at Week 0 (prior to first therapy session) to establish a baseline. Measures at Week 8 (midpoint of therapy sessions), and Week 16 (following last therapy session) will determine change from the baseline. | |
Secondary | Change in Mood | The 15-item Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS) will be used to assess depressive symptoms and mood in PWMLs (van Marwijk, Wallace, de Bock, 1995). This is a well-validated tool to measure mood that is specifically designed for the aging population. It has demonstrated reliability and validity for persons with cognitive impairment. Each of the 15 items receives a score of 0 or 1, with 1 being an indication of depression. The 15 item scores are summed into a total score. Possible range is 0-15. A score of 0 to 5 is considered normal. A score greater than 5 suggests depression. | Will be administered at Week 0 (prior to first therapy session) to establish a baseline. Measures at Week 8 (midpoint of therapy sessions), and Week 16 (following last therapy session) will determine change from the baseline. | |
Secondary | Change in Quality of Life (self-esteem, positive affect, negative affect, and sense of aesthetics) | The scale has 29 items across 5 subdomains: Positive Affect (6 items), Negative Affect (11 items), Feelings of Belonging (3 items), Self-esteem (4 items), and Sense of Aesthetics (5 items). Each item is scored on a scale from 1-5, with 1 indicating "not at all" or "never" and 5 indicating "a lot" or "very often". A score is computed for each subdomain by averaging the item scores from the domain. So subdomain scores range from 1 to 5. No overall DQoL score is computed. | Will be administered at Week 0 (prior to first therapy session) to establish a baseline. Measures at Week 8 (midpoint of therapy sessions), and Week 16 (following last therapy session) will determine change from the baseline. |
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