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Alzheimer Disease clinical trials

View clinical trials related to Alzheimer Disease.

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NCT ID: NCT05147428 Completed - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

A Program to Reduce Inappropriate Medications Among Older Adults With Alzheimer's Disease

D-PRESCRIBE-AD
Start date: June 21, 2022
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Potentially inappropriate prescribing includes the use of medications that may no longer be necessary or that may increase the risk of harm. Inappropriate prescribing can increase the overall symptom burden, and negatively affect health-related quality of life and function. The inappropriate prescription of certain drug categories such as sedative/hypnotics, antipsychotics, and strong anticholinergic agents poses particular risks for older adults, and may be more common among those with Alzheimer's disease and Alzheimer's disease- related dementias (AD/ADRD) due to a higher prevalence of multimorbidity and more frequent prescription of five or more medications. The D-PRESCRIBE-AD (Developing a PRogram to Educate and Sensitize Caregivers to Reduce the Inappropriate Prescription Burden in Elderly with Alzheimer's Disease) study will test a health plan-based intervention using the NIH Collaboratory's Distributed Research Network, which employs the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) Sentinel System infrastructure. The overarching goal of this randomized controlled trial is to assess the effect of a patient/caregiver- centered, multifaceted educational intervention on potentially inappropriate prescribing in patients with AD/ADRD. The research hypothesis is that education on inappropriate prescribing among patients/caregivers and their providers can reduce medication-related morbidity in patients with AD/ADRD and improve medication safety for this vulnerable population. The study population will include community-dwelling patients with AD/ADRD, identified based on diagnoses codes of AD/ADRD or use of a medication for Alzheimer's Disease, who have evidence of potentially inappropriate prescribing the three drug classes above. The trial will evaluate the effect of educational interventions designed to spur patient/caregiver-provider communication about medication safety (versus usual care) on the proportion of patients with inappropriate prescribing, the primary outcome of this study. The trial will be conducted in two large, national health plans.

NCT ID: NCT05125536 Completed - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

The Effect of Music in Alzheimer's Patients

Start date: April 16, 2018
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This study was randomized controlled study conducted to determine the effect of Nihavent theme on reducing adjustment difficulties in Alzheimer's patients. The study was carried out with 30 patients.15 patients constituted the experimental group and 15 patients formed the control group. Before the application, the scale was administered to both groups through face-to-face interviews. The patients in the experimental group were informed about the music session in advance.Instrumental songs in nihavent theme were played with the sound system to the experimental group. The sessions were lasted 12 weeks in total and there were two sessions per week, and each session took approximately 50 minutes to complete. While no intervention was performed for the patients in the control group. One week after the last music session, the the scale was re-administered to both groups.

NCT ID: NCT05108922 Completed - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

A Study of Donanemab (LY3002813) Compared With Aducanumab in Participants With Early Symptomatic Alzheimer's Disease (TRAILBLAZER-ALZ 4)

Start date: November 16, 2021
Phase: Phase 3
Study type: Interventional

The main purpose of this study is to compare donanemab to aducanumab on brain amyloid plaque clearance in participants with early symptomatic Alzheimer's Disease (AD).

NCT ID: NCT05104463 Completed - Dementia Clinical Trials

A Study of CST-2032 and CST-107 in Subjects With Mild Cognitive Impairment or Mild Dementia Due to Parkinson's or Alzheimer's Disease

Start date: April 12, 2022
Phase: Phase 2
Study type: Interventional

This is a Phase 2a, randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blind, crossover study to evaluate the effects CST-2032 administered with CST-107 on cognition in subjects with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) or mild dementia.

NCT ID: NCT05102045 Completed - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

The Effects of Repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation in Patients With Alzheimer's Disease

Start date: September 1, 2016
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

Objectives: The purpose of this study was to investigate the effects of high-frequency repetitive Transcranial Magnetic Stimulation (rTMS) in Alzheimer's Disease (AD). Methods: Twenty-seven AD patients aged ≥60 years were included in the study and divided into 3 groups (rTMS, Aerobic Exercise (AE) and control). All groups received pharmacological treatment. rTMS group (n=10) received 20 Hz rTMS treatment on bilateral dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, 5 days a week over 2 weeks, and AE group (n=10) received the moderate-intensity aerobic exercise for 50 min sessions, 5 days a week over 2 weeks. Control group (n=10) was only treated pharmacologically. Neuropsychiatric and behavioral status, cognition, balance, functional mobility, and quality of life, and functional brain changes were evaluated before and after the treatment.

NCT ID: NCT05094817 Completed - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

Feasibility of an Online, Self-administered Cognitive Screening Tool in Older Patients Undergoing Ambulatory Surgery

FOCUS
Start date: February 11, 2022
Phase:
Study type: Observational

Delirium is common in older adults after inpatient surgery and may be associated with cognitive decline. Advances in surgical and anesthetic techniques have led to increasing numbers of older adults undergoing surgery on an outpatient basis. However, few studies have investigated cognitive disorders of older adults before or after ambulatory surgery. Increased age and pre-existing cognitive impairment are strong risk factors for cognitive decline after surgery, yet older adults are not screened for cognitive impairment before surgery. Existing screening tools require specially trained staff for test administration and in-person testing. Virtual cognitive screening has not been evaluated in surgical patients. In this study, investigators will determine the feasibility of using Cogniciti's Brain Health Assessment (BHA) - a validated online cognitive screening tool that can be self-administered from a patient's home before surgery - to screen older adults before ambulatory surgery.

NCT ID: NCT05082883 Completed - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

Cognitive Screening Made Easy for PCPs

Start date: August 13, 2021
Phase:
Study type: Observational

In the United States and around the world, people are living longer lives. As the population ages, so does the number of older adults who may experience declines in memory, attention, reasoning, or other thinking skills. Some of these changes in cognition can be treated and reversed if caught early. Others can be slowed down and hopefully one day prevented. Unfortunately, people with cognitive decline or very mild dementia often are not recognized until late in the disease course when treatments are less effective. As the first health care professional most people reach out to about medical concerns, primary care providers play a critical role in detecting cognitive decline early. While many primary care providers conduct cognitive screening at Medicare Annual Wellness Visits and when patients voice concerns, 9 out of 10 would like more information about who to screen, which assessment tool to use, and what to say if screening is positive. Deciding who to screen with a brief cognitive assessment tool is a key part of the process because not everyone needs to be screened, and primary care providers already face time pressures to address the obvious and immediate concerns of their patients. The long-term goal of this project is to develop a risk assessment and cognitive screening tool that requires minimal time and effort from primary care providers or their staff and is sensitive to cognitive decline in older adults from diverse educational and racial/ethnic backgrounds. The tool will be integrated into electronic health record systems to make it easy for primary care providers and patients to see results. The specific aims of the first phase of the project are to modify an existing dementia risk screening index to identify older adults who are at high-risk for cognitive impairment, develop a brief cognitive assessment tool using tasks that are easy for older adults to perform yet are sensitive to cognitive decline, confirm their utility in 150 people with varying levels of cognitive abilities that have already been well defined, and test ways to integrate findings into the electronic health record. The specific aims for the second phase are to further test the effectiveness of the newly developed tool in 250 older adults receiving care in a primary care clinic, to find out from primary care providers using the tool how much they liked it and if it was useful and easy to use, and to integrate findings into multiple electronic health record systems. Findings from this project will fill a gap in the existing toolkit of primary care providers and will make screening for cognitive decline quick, easy, and effective.

NCT ID: NCT05080777 Completed - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

Pilot Pragmatic Clinical Trial to Embed Tele-Savvy Into Health Care Systems

Start date: September 28, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

This cluster randomized pragmatic clinical trial will test the effectiveness and feasibility of embedding the Tele-Savvy intervention, a psychoeducational program for family and other informal caregivers of older adults living in the community with Alzheimer's disease and related dementia (ADRD), in two health care systems/clinical sites: UConn Health in Farmington, Connecticut, and Emory Healthcare in Atlanta, Georgia.

NCT ID: NCT05077826 Completed - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

Enhancing Memory in Mild Cognitive Impairment and Early Stage Alzheimer's Disease

MEMORI
Start date: October 7, 2021
Phase: N/A
Study type: Interventional

The investigators have developed a low-risk transcranial Electrical Stimulation (tES) treatment that has improved learning and performance in young adults up to nearly 4 times when compared with a sham control. This randomized pilot trial will determine if this same tES protocol improves memory in older adults (50-90 years old) who are healthy, and separately in older adults with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) or early stage Alzheimer's disease (AD). TES will be applied to the right temple and left arm for up to 40 minutes. MRI images, along with other measures, may be obtained before and after tES. If effective, this intervention may help to improve the quality of life for AD patients and their families.

NCT ID: NCT05077631 Completed - Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trials

Study to Evaluate the Effects of Single Ascending Oral Doses of ACD856 on Safety, Tolerability and Pharmacokinetics

Start date: February 15, 2021
Phase: Phase 1
Study type: Interventional

The SAD design of the study is based on the aim to study safety, tolerability and PK of selected doses of ACD856 in a limited number of healthy volunteers. ACD856 will be administered orally.