Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trial
Official title:
Detecting an Early Response to Donepezil With Measures of Visual Attention
Verified date | January 2021 |
Source | NYU Langone Health |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
Acetylcholinesterase inhibitors (AChE-I) comprise a class of drugs used to treat Alzheimer's disease (AD), but controversy about their usefulness remains. Modest response rates of treated versus placebo groups, small effect sizes with respect to efficacy, drug costs, and clinical relevance of the effects are problematic. Standard efficacy measures of efficacy are not sufficiently sensitive, and trying to assess cognitive change after 4-6 months of therapy confounds the drug effect and the natural progression of the disease. Surprisingly, attention has never been included in the assessment of AChE-I drugs. The rationale for using attentional measures are that (1) Attentional deficits are recognized as a critical cognitive change in the earliest phases of AD; (2) Attentional function is directly mediated by the cholinergic system, and responds rapidly to cholinergic augmentation, particularly on tasks that tax available attentional capacity are dose dependent; and (3) Acetylcholine is depleted in AD. However, the link between attention and cholinergic depletion in AD has not been fully explored, especially with regard to response to cholinergic treatment. The study tests if attentional performance can be a more sensitive marker of response. In a longitudinal study we measure attentional, as well as cognitive and behavioral performance in de novo AD patients undergoing donepezil treatment. The investigators develop visual attentional measures and contrast them to global and domain-specific cognitive scores on three occasions (T1) baseline pre-treatment, (T2) after approximately 6 weeks, and (T3) after 6 months treatment. The T1-to-T2 arm is a double-blind placebo control period, after which members of the placebo group start open-label treatment. The assessment at 6 months allows us to determine whether the changes seen earlier at T2 can predict patients who respond, or determine which measures best predict response. We hypothesize that attention measures are more sensitive than standard global measures or other cognitive domains and that the change of attentional function can be detected after only after approximately 6 weeks treatment. Knowledge from this project will facilitate and inform our decisions about individual patients undergoing pharmacological treatment.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 25 |
Est. completion date | January 13, 2021 |
Est. primary completion date | July 31, 2009 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 50 Years to 95 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: - Clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's Disease - Mini Mental State Examination score >15 / 30 - Can swallow pills Exclusion Criteria: - No other dementia due to Parkinson's disease, Lewy Body dementia, Normal Pressure Hydrocephalus, Fronto-temporal dementia, or prominent cerebral vascular accident - No prior or concurrent use of cholinesterase inhibitors - No prior or concurrent use of memantine hydrochloride - No other concurrent anticholinergic treatments |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | Winthrop-University Hospital | Mineola | New York |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
NYU Langone Health | Queens College, The City University of New York |
United States,
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change in Foreperiod Effect Task - Processing Speed | Computerized attention task measures response time to detect a target presented at varied interstimulus intervals (350ms and 500ms). Participants respond to centrally presented asterisk on computer screen. Time elapsed from prior stimulus (= interstimulus interval) indicates when prior stimulus was presented. xx | Baseline to 6 weeks | |
Primary | Change in Covert Orienting Task | Computerized attention task measuring response time to detect a target after a spatial orienting cues of either valid (cue on same side in space as target) or Invalid Cue (cue on opposite side of space as target). Longer response time (msec) indicates worse performance. | Baseline to 6 weeks | |
Primary | Change in Attentional Blink Task Baseline to 6 Weeks - Stimulus Onset Asynchrony (SOA) 266ms | Computerized attention task measures the accuracy of reporting stimuli presented at time intervals, varying load. Faster reaction time and accuracy represents better performance. | Baseline to 6 weeks | |
Primary | Change in Attentional Blink Task Baseline to 6 Weeks - SOA 399ms | Computerized attention task measures the accuracy of reporting stimuli presented within 399 ms interval. Higher accuracy represents better performance. | Baseline to 6 weeks | |
Primary | Change of ADAS-COG From Baseline to 6 Months | Change of Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale - Cognitive subscale (ADAS-Cog); primary outcome measure of drug efficacy. Minimum value = 0, maximum value = 70. Higher scores represent worse cognitive functioning. | Baseline to 6 months | |
Primary | Foreperiod Effect Task at 6 Weeks - Fatigue (Blocks 1 & 2) | Computerized attention task measures reaction time (RT) to detect a target presented at varied interstimulus interval comparing Block 1 (presented at beginning of session) and Block 2 (presented at end of session) | 6 weeks | |
Primary | Change in Foreperiod Effect Task - Variability (350ms & 500ms) | Computerized attention task measures the variability (SD) in response time to detect a target presented at varied interstimulus intervals (350ms and 500ms) | Baseline to 6 weeks | |
Primary | Covert Orienting at 6 Weeks - Fatigue Across Blocks | Computerized attention task measures response time to detect a target across blocks of stimuli. Data shown for performance at Block1 and Block5 | 6 weeks | |
Primary | Neuropsychiatric Inventory Score | Neuropsychiatric Inventory (NPI) is a scale that measures neuropsychiatric symptoms. We reported a score that captures the frequency of each symptom multiplied by the severity rating score. Scores range from 0 - 144; Higher scores represent worse outcomes. | 6 months | |
Primary | Instrumental Activities of Daily Living | Scale of instrumental activities of daily living (IADLs), adapted from Lawton Brody scale. Caregiver rates 8 functional items from 0-2 severity. Total score is the sum of ratings for each item. Total score ranges from 0 (minimum) to 16 (maximum) with higher scores representing worse functional outcomes. | 6 months | |
Secondary | Change in Dementia Rating Scale | Dementia Rating Scale (DRS) change score (performance at 6 weeks minus performance at baseline). This is a global measure of cognitive function. Scores range from 0 - 144; higher scores represent better cognitive functioning. | Baseline to 6 weeks | |
Secondary | Mini Mental Status Examination | Mini Mental Status Examination (MMSE) is a commonly used cognitive screener. Scores range from 0-30; higher scores mean better cognitive functioning. | Baseline to 6 weeks | |
Secondary | Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale - Cognitive (ADAS-Cog) | Change of Alzheimer's Disease Assessment Scale - Cognitive subscale (ADAS-Cog); primary outcome measure of drug efficacy. Minimum value = 0, maximum value = 70. Higher scores represent worse cognitive functioning. | Baseline to 6 weeks | |
Secondary | Change in Digit Span Forward | This measure represents the change in the variable longest Digit Span Forward (LDSF) from baseline to 6 weeks. Score represents the maximum length of number repeated in the forward condition. Score ranges from 0 to 9. Higher scores represent better outcome. | Baseline to 6 weeks | |
Secondary | Change in Hopkins Verbal Learning Test- Revised - Recall | Hopkins Verbal Learning Test- Revised (HVLT-R) (Brandt, 1991) is a list-learning task. Recall variable is computed by adding the number of words repeated in each of the three learning trials. Raw scores of each measure were used in the analyses. Total Recall ranges from 0-30. Higher scores represent better outcome. | Baseline to 6 weeks | |
Secondary | Change in Language Function Assessed With the Letter Fluency Test | Letter fluency (FAS) (Benton, 1967) was selected to assess speed of verbal generativity. Participants are required to generate words that start with a particular letter (excluding n; three trials (words starting with 'F', 'A', 'S' each for 1 minute minutes) are administered. Higher performance is better with range from 0 to unlimited. | Baseline to 6 weeks | |
Secondary | Change on Trail Making Test - Condition | The Delis-Kaplan Executive Function (D-KEFS Trail) Subtest 4: Number-Letter Switching Scaled Score was used to assess executive functioning. Scaled scores range from 1-19. Higher scores represent less impairment (below 8 = low; 8-12 = average; > 12 = above average). Scores represent seconds to complete the task. Faster performance is better. | Baseline to 6 weeks | |
Secondary | Change in Visual Form Discrimination | Measure of visuospatial function requiring matching designs from the Benton Visual Form Discrimination test. Total scores is calculated by adding the number of items correct. Total score ranges from 0-32, higher score is better. | Baseline to 6 weeks | |
Secondary | Change in Category Fluency Test | Measure of language / semantic function. This task requires participants to generate words belonging to specific categories within 1 minute. There are three trials. Total scores is computed by obtaining the mean number of words generated across the three trials (fruits/vegetables/animals). Higher score represents better outcome. | Baseline to 6 weeks | |
Secondary | Change in Digit Span Backwards | This measure represents the change in the variable longest Digit Span Backwards (LDSB) from baseline to 6 weeks. Score represents the maximum length of number repeated in the backward condition. Score ranges from 0 to 8. Higher scores represent better outcome. | Baseline to 6 weeks |
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