Alzheimer Disease Clinical Trial
— M-AALOfficial title:
Playful Multimodal Intervention, Monitoring and Decision Support for Activation of People With Alzheimer's Dementia
The worldwide prevalence of dementia is increasing. Pharmaceutical therapies, at the best, slow the degenerative process, observable in Alzheimer's disease (AD). Additional approaches are therefore urgently needed to maintain the patient's independence and the abilities to execute activities of daily living to reduce the patient specific, familial and economic burden. Multimodal tablet-based training might be a potential linchpin in this quest. The primary aim of this study therefore is, to examine the efficacy of the tablet-based training program "Multimodal Activation" (MMA) in mild AD patients. In a randomized controlled trial the investigators aim to include 220 mild AD patients, of which 110 are randomly assigned to the training group receiving guided tablet-based training for 1.5 years, and 110 to the control group. The multimodal intervention, as implemented in the training, includes physical, cognitive and social components. Efficacy of the training will be determined by means of between group pre-post comparison in quantitative neuropsychological and qualitative tests, MRI biomarker and blood biomarker.
Status | Recruiting |
Enrollment | 220 |
Est. completion date | April 2022 |
Est. primary completion date | April 2021 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 50 Years to 101 Years |
Eligibility | Inclusion Criteria: Persons with dementia - are diagnosed of possible or probable dementia according to NINCDS-ADRDA criteria (McKhann et al. 2011). - are older than 40 years at baseline examination. - are able to speak and understand German and possesses sufficient physical, auditory and visual faculties to take part in a neuropsychological examination and a tablet-based training. - have been receiving stable medication therapy for a minimum of 3 months before the baseline examination. - who have been treated with a Memantine therapy, which started 3 months before the baseline examination. - will be accompanied to the neurological examinations at T0a and T3a at the University Clinic of Neurology by an informal caregiver (relative or other significant person). - may receive professional 24-hours-care - in this case an informal caregiver must be recruited as participant/accompanying person. - live at home, with or without an informal caregiver (if alone, an informal caregiver should live nearby). - receive professional care (e.g. home care services) or informal care (e.g. relatives) or no care yet. - are willing and able to give informed consent or an informal caregiver with power of representation or a trustee gives the informed consent to participation in the study. - do not receive any antipsychotic or antidepressive medication or have been stably adjusted to the medication for a minimum of 14 days before study start. Informal caregivers - are significant persons (e.g. family members, friends) of the participating persons with dementia (adults) which provide or do not provide care. - living or not living with the person with dementia in the same household. - are associated with a person with dementia receiving or not receiving professional care. - speak and understand German. - are able to give informed consent to participation in the study. Dementia trainers - are adults. - are trained as M.A.S. (Morbus Alzheimer Syndrome) trainer. - train the participants with dementia at home. - speak and understand German. - are able to give informed consent to participation in the study. Exclusion Criteria - Participation in a clinical trial until the last three months before study entry - The participant presumably cannot finish the study - Any of the following signs in brain MRI: - Infarct close to major vessels - More than one lacunar infarction (diameter 1.5cm in every spatial direction) - One lacunar infarct in a strategic region, such as the thalamus, the hippocampus or the caudate nucleus - Confluent lesions in deep white matter (Fazekas Score 3) - Other focal lesions potentially causing cognitive status (e.g. infections, lesions, normal pressure hydrocephalus) - A general anesthetic three months before study entry or during study period - The participant has a immunomodulating treatment or will receive a immunomodulating treatment during study period - Cancer (last treatment >=5 years before study entry) - Myocard infarction within 2 years before study entry - Hepatitis B, C, HIV, Syphilis - The patient has an active contagious disease - The patient has a systemic disease potentially causing rapid progression - Insufficiently treated cardiac insufficiency (NYHA>3) - BMI>40 - Insufficiently treated diabetes - Renal failure - Chronic liver disease - Other clinically relevant systemic diseases - The Patient suffers from hypothyreosis. Patients with treated hypothyreosis may participate if stable therapy since >3 months is given - Psychiatric diseases, such as schizophrenia, psychotic diseases or a bipolar disease - Current depressive episode or major depression within the last 2 years before study entry - Metabolic or toxic encephalopathy or dementia due to general medical conditions |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
Austria | Medical University of Graz, Austria | Graz | Styria |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Medical University of Graz | HS & I, Joanneum Research Forschungsgesellschaft mbH, Rotes Kreuz (RK), Sozialverein Deutschlandsberg (SVDL) |
Austria,
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Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | Change of cognition (persons with dementia) | The "Montreal Cognitive Assessment" has 30 items in 8 domains of cognitive functioning: attention and concentration, executive functions, memory, language, visuoconstructional skills, conceptual thinking, calculations, and orientation. 0-30 points can be obtained. Lower scores indicate a higher degree of cognitive impairment. | day 0, month 6, month 12, month 18 | |
Primary | Neuropsychological Test Battery | Pre-post comparisons in cognitive assessment's composite scores will used for efficacy of the tablet-training. The following z-transformed scores will be used to calculate a composite score:
Wechsler Memory Scale (WMS-III-R) : Visuelle Paarerkennung I (min-ma:0-18, higher= better) Wechsler Memory Scale (WMS-III-R) : Verbale Paarerkennung I (min-ma:0-24, higher=better) Wechsler Memory Scale (WMS-III-R) : digit span (min-max: Trail Making Test, Version A (min-max: 0-180 seconds, lower better) Trail Making Test, Version B (min-max: 0-300 seconds, lower better) Verbaler Lern- und Merkfähigkeitstest, Subscore "Lernen und Datenakquisition" (min-ma:0-75, higher better) Testbatterie zur Aufmerksamkeitsprüfung (min-ma:0-n.a., lower better) Regensburger Wortflüssigkeitstest (verbal fluency test; 0-max, higher better) |
day 0, month 18 | |
Secondary | Change of depression (persons with dementia) | The short version of the "Geriatric Depression Scale" will be used for persons with dementia. The scale has 15 items (yes/no answers). 0-15 points can be obtained. Higher scores indicate a higher level of depressive symptoms. | day 0, month 18 | |
Secondary | Change of mobility (persons with dementia) | The "Timed UP and GO Test" measures the time (in seconds) an individual needs to stand up from a standard arm chair, walk a distance of 3 meters, turn, walk back to the chair, and sit down. Interpretation: <10 seconds = completely unrestricted; 10-19 seconds = less mobile, but still unrestricted; 20 - 29 seconds = limited mobility; >30 seconds = pronounced mobility restriction. 14 seconds and more has been shown to indicate a high risk of falls. | day 0, month 18 | |
Secondary | Change of motivation (persons with dementia) | The "Apathy Evaluation Scale" is a scale to measure motivation because apathy can be understood as a loss of motivation. The scale has 18 items (4-point Likert scale). 18-72 points can be obtained. Higher scores correspond to a higher degree of apathy and therefore lower motivation. The German version (FAM) of the "Questionnaire on Current Motivation (QCM)" uses 18 items (7-point Likert scale) to measure the motivation to learn in terms of four motivational domains: anxiety, probability of success, interest, and challenge. The goal of the procedure is to prove the effects of current motivation on learning and performance. Four mean scale values are calculated. A total value is not calculated. For all subscales, higher levels on the respective subscales indicate a higher level of expression in the respective construct. | day 0, month 18 (AES self); day 0, month 6, month 12, month 18 (AES proxy, FAM) | |
Secondary | Change of quality of life (persons with dementia) | The "Dementia Quality of Life Instrument" will be used for the participants with dementia. The instrument has 28 items (4-point Likert scale) and covers Quality of Life in the following three domains: emotions (items 1-13), memory (items 14-19) and activities of daily living (items 20-28). A global quality-of-life item is also included but does not contribute to the overall score. For every item, 1 to 4 points can be obtained, with higher scores indicating better quality of life. | day 0, month 18 | |
Secondary | Change of lifestyle factors (persons with dementia) | The "Fantastic Lifestyle Checklist for Dementia (FANTASTIC-D)" is an instrument that assesses lifestyle factors of people with dementia. The instrument includes a total of 27 questions (5-point Likert scale) in the following 10 areas: 1) family, friends, 2) activity, 3) nutrition, 4) tobacco and toxins, 5) alcohol consumption, 6) sleep, shoes, stress 7) (type) personality 8) individual mental health 9) coping with role, situation 10) dementia-cognition. In total, between 0 and 108 points can be achieved with FANTASTIC-D. The higher the total score, the better the lifestyle of the respondent. | day 0, month 6, month 12, month 18 | |
Secondary | Technology acceptance (persons with dementia, informal caregivers, dementia trainers) | The "Technology Usage Inventory" assesses participants' acceptance of new technologies and consists of 8 main domains: curiosity, anxiety, interest, user-friendliness, immersion, usefulness, skepticism, accessibility. These domains include 30 items using a 7-point Likert scale (ranging from 1=strongly disagree to 7=strongly agree). There is also a ninth domain "intention to use" with three items using a visual analogue scale: a straight horizontal line of 100 mm with the two ends (100 points=not agree; 0 points=agree). For all subscales, higher levels on the respective subscales indicate a higher level of expression in the respective construct. Individual interviews (people with dementia) and focus groups (other participants) will be conducted to obtain more in-deep knowledge. | day 0, month 18; Interviews after 6 months | |
Secondary | Change of care dependency (persons with dementia) | The "Care Dependency Scale" has 15 items (5-point Likert scale). 15-75 points can be obtained. Lower scores indicate a higher degree of care dependency. | day 0, month 18 | |
Secondary | Change of the activity level (persons with dementia) | The "Pool Activity Level (PAL)" is a checklist to identify individuals' ability to engage in activity. It consists of nine everyday activities, with four activity levels: planned, exploratory, sensory and reflex. The description that most matches the individual's performance over the past two weeks is selected. The activity level that is most frequently ticked indicates the person's level of ability to engage in activity. | day 0, month 18 | |
Secondary | Change of care burden (informal caregivers) | The "Zarid Burden Interview" captures the subjective burden of caregivers. The instrument has 22 items (5-point Likert scale). 0-88 points can be obtained. Higher scores indicate greater caregiver distress. | day 0, month 18 | |
Secondary | Change of perceived stress (informal caregivers) | The Perceived Stress Scale (PSS-10) is a widely and well-established self-report scale measuring perceived stress. The PSS-10 measures the degree to which life in the past month has been experienced as unpredictable, uncontrollable and overwhelming on a 5-point Likert scale (0 = "never", 1="almost never", 2="sometimes", 3="fairly often", 4="very often"). Higher scores indicate a higher level of perceived stress. | day 0, month 18 | |
Secondary | Total Brain Volume measured with MRI | Brain tissue volume, normalised for subject head size, will be estimated with SIENAX [Smith 2001, Smith 2002], part of FSL [Smith 2004]. SIENAX starts by extracting brain and skull images from the single whole-head input data [Smith 2002b]. The brain image is then affine-registered to MNI152 space [Jenkinson 2001, Jenkinson 2002] (using the skull image to determine the registration scaling); this is primarily in order to obtain the volumetric scaling factor, to be used as a normalisation for head size. Next, tissue-type segmentation with partial volume estimation is carried out [Zhang 2001] in order to calculate total volume of brain tissue (including separate estimates of volumes of grey matter, white matter, peripheral grey matter and ventricular CSF). Volume is then given as mm3. | day 0, month 18 | |
Secondary | Local Brain Volume measured with MRI | FIRST is a model-based segmentation tool part of FSL [Smith 2004]. The shape models used in FIRST are constructed from manually segmented images provided by the Center for Morphometric Analysis (CMA), MGH, Boston. The manual labels are parameterized as surface meshes and modelled as a point distribution model. Deformable surfaces are used to automatically parameterize the volumetric labels in terms of meshes; the deformable surfaces are constrained to preserve vertex correspondence across the training data. Furthermore, normalized intensities along the surface normals are sampled and modelled. The shape and appearance model is based on multivariate Gaussian assumptions. Shape is then expressed as a mean with modes of variation (principal components). The investigators are primarily interested in the volume (mm3) of the hippocampus and the basal ganglia. | day 0, month 18 |
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