Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Phase 4 Study of Cognitive Therapy and Donepezil in Alzheimers Disease.
The Dementia Study in Northern Norway is an open controled intervention trial carried out in
nine rural municipalities, five of which allocated to intervention and four to control. A
RCT with donepezil and placebo is superimposed on all patients included in the study. In
this way the study has a 2x2 factorial design. The outcome measures are changes in cognitive
performance and ADL function measured by standardized cognitive and neuropsychological tests
every four months during a one-year follow-up.
The main goal of this study is to examine the effect of systematically and individually
adjusted stimulation therapy on cognitive function in patients having recent diagnoses of
Alzheimer´s disease (AD).
A secondary goal is to examine whether or not ChEI has an additional effect on cognitive
function superimposed on stimulation therapy.
From January 2006 to 31th March 2008 187 patients with a recent diagnosis of dementia were
included. Patients were recruited by GPs in routine practice (n=87) and by a population
based screening (n=100).Screening recruited younger patients with a higher MMSE-score, and
relatively more men. All over, women were older and at a more serious disease stage. After
age adjusting significantly more women were living single and required more supports from
the community nursery.
Nine municipalities with 11807 inhabitants 65 years and older were allocated to intervention
or control, five and four municipalities in each group, respectively. A panel of psychiatric
nurses, university lecturers and members of the competence centre of dementia in Northern
Norway have worked out a program of stimulation therapy adjusted to each participant taking
the stage of functional impairment, education level and work experience into consideration.
The individual stimulation program is selected and implemented, based on the life history
for each patient, and carried out for a minimum of 30 minutes 5 days a week in the
intervention group, as compared to the control group receiving routine care. The individual
stimulation program was monitored and adjusted during the period of intervention. All
patients included in the nine municipalities were randomized to donepezil or placebo in a
double blind manner.
Consequently, the present study has a double design; - an open prospective
non-pharmaceutical intervention with control group, to which a double blind and randomized
placebo-controlled trial is superimposed (2x2 factorial design). Each patient have been
followed-up for one year. The clinical period was three years, two of them allocated
recruitment and the third to secure a one-year intervention for all participants.
The Progress of the Study The recruitment of patients through routine general practice has
not been successful. The participating general practitioners (GP) rarely examined patients
suffering from cognitive impairment. Sometimes patients with a presumptive diagnosis of
dementia were prescribed cholinesterase inhibitors (ChEI) without a preceding clinical
examination. As a result of this lack of corporation only 27 patients were recruited to the
study during the first year. During the subsequent six months some of the nine participating
municipalities reorganized their caring routines for patients suffering from dementia. More
patients were examined and diagnosed and another 60 patients were recruited to the study.
As a consequence of the unsatisfactory progress in recruiting patients to the study by GPs
in routine clinical practice, the study protocol was changed and the recruiting procedures
were supplemented by a population-based screening. The study population (65 years+) was
invited to attend the survey by responding to and return a postal questionnaire containing
five simple questions regarding memory and cognitive deficits. The screening program was
accomplished in June 2007 with a response rate of approximately 32 % for self-reported
memory deficits. An algorithm categorizes the responders. Those belonging to the category
with the highest risk of having a diagnosis of dementia were invited to a clinical
examination carried out by physicians from the study administration. Those fulfilling the
inclusion criteria were then asked to be included in this Dementia Study in Northern-Norway.
More than 700 responders answered NO to the five questions about cognitive impairment but
YES to a question about participating in the study. From this group of presumptively
cognitive healthy people we randomly draw a sample of 500 persons who was invited to
participate in a control group for the AD participants. Of these 200 individuals were
confirmed cognitively healthy and included in the control group. The two groups have been
compared according to clinical data, co-morbidity and drug consumption. A biobank containing
whole blood, plasma and serum from AD participants and the cognitively healthy control group
is established.
The stimulation program was executed as presupposed, and the randomisation procedures and
administration of the medical treatment (placebo/donepezil) has been accomplished without
any problems.
The following papers have been published in BMC Methodology and in BMC Geriatrics:
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2318/11/58
http://www.biomedcentral.com/1471-2288/10/35
;
Allocation: Randomized, Endpoint Classification: Safety/Efficacy Study, Intervention Model: Factorial Assignment, Masking: Double Blind (Investigator, Outcomes Assessor), Primary Purpose: Treatment
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