View clinical trials related to Alzheimer Disease.
Filter by:As part of Phase II of the NIH SBIR grant, the study will conduct a randomized controlled clinical trial in which the MapHabit system (MHS) will offer a caregiver training product that is linked to MHS, an Alzheimer's disease or related dementias (AD/ADRD) assistive technology product that uses visual maps to improve a patient's behavior and sense of autonomy. MapHabit's combined areas of focus, i.e., offer a single integrated product to address the caregiver and the person under this caregiver's care, are unique and will create a new standard in the field to reduce caregiver burden in the setting of caring for individuals with AD/ADRD. Additionally, the study will integrate enhanced user support modules, i.e., gamifying, dashboarding, and social networking, to improve the Caregiver Training Program (CTP) experience.The study will be a randomized controlled clinical trial, in which two conditions will be investigated: 1) control condition in which the MHS alone is incorporated in the participant's daily care and 2) experimental condition in which the MHS+CTP is implemented into the daily care received by participants. The sample size will be a total of 50 patient-caregiver dyads, 25 in each condition. The study duration will be a 6-month intervention.
This is a bridging study to visually and quantitatively assess PET images obtained after single application of 300 MBq [18F]florbetaben and PET scanning of patients with Alzheimer disease.
This study is to evaluate the safety and tolerability of single dose of GB-5001 (donepezil) IM depot in healthy male volunteers. And, it is to predict the multiple-dose pharmacokinetics based on the single-dose pharmacokinetics of GB-5001 IM depot and the oral Aricept® (donepezil hydrochloride) tablet by PK modeling.
This is a feasibility study on the effects of an online-based training and education programme for carers of people with posterior cortical atrophy (PCA), primary progressive aphasia (PPA) and behavioural-variant frontotemporal dementia (bvFTD).
In prior work, this team developed a telehealth primary care model (TIPC), designed in close partnership with patients and clinicians to address a widespread increase in telehealth use during the COVID-19 pandemic. This research team will test the TIPC intervention to assess support for patients among a population of persons with dementia (PwD). Participants will be enrolled in the study for a 12 month period. This study's aims are 1) to explore the impact of the TIPC intervention on patient-important outcomes, engagement with community-based support provided through insurers, advanced care planning (primarily identification of health-care proxy), and patterns of hospice and healthcare utilization in the target population and 2) to evaluate patient, caregiver, and clinical team perspectives of feasibility and acceptability of a TIPC model, and apply findings from this work to the development of a larger randomized control trial designed to assess long-term efficacy of TIPC intervention.
The goal of this Phase 2 Open Label study is to evaluate long-term safety, tolerability, and efficacy of XPro1595 on measures of cognition, function and brain quality in individuals with Alzheimer's Disease.
proof-of-concept study to adequately design a larger trial to investigate the effect of supplementation of a probiotic (SLAB51) on AD biomarker.
To test the effect of a tailored lighting intervention controlled by the Readings At Desk (RAD) controller on sleep and mood in Alzheimer's disease participants.
The subject uses cytof to analyze PBMC of sporadic AD and DLB, which is used to reveal the differences in immune characteristics of the two diseases at the single-cell level, build immune models for specific diseases, and define these two neurodegenerative diseases with high precision from the level of molecular immunity. To provide basis for further study of the immunohistochemical differences between the two diseases, and provide objective support for clinical diagnosis and differential diagnosis.
This is the pilot phase of a longitudinal observational cohort study. The study includes family clusters comprised of a patient with Alzheimer's disease, an informal caregiver and at least one first-degree relative of the patient. The family clusters will be followed-up in expert memory centers and online in order to study risk and prognostic factors (including blood-based biomarkers) in the first-degree relatives and patients, respectively, as well as caregiver health, difficulties and needs. This pilot study is performed to assess the feasibility of conducting a larger-scale study.