Stroke Clinical Trial
Official title:
Dosage and Predictors of Naming Treatment Response in Aphasia
This study examines aphasia treatment response among Veterans and non-Veterans living with aphasia. It seeks to identify cognitive and neural factors which are predictive of positive response to treatment targeting naming impairments in aphasia. It also examines the dose-response relationship for naming treatment. More broadly, it seeks to determine who aphasia therapy works best for, and how much aphasia therapy is sufficient to achieve positive treatment response.
Language and communicative impairments following stroke (aphasia) affect more than 30% of
stroke survivors, with an incidence of over 180,000 new cases annually. The consequences of
aphasia are far reaching and can affect psychosocial adjustment, family role participation,
vocational opportunities, and the ability to function independently in society. Recent
estimates suggest that VHA outpatient clinics see 2000 new cases of aphasia each year,
meaning that approximately 20,000 enrolled VHA patients and 100,000 United States Veterans
are currently living with the condition. In response to this need, the VA Pittsburgh
Healthcare System Geriatric Research, Education, and Clinical Center (GRECC) initiated the
Program for Intensive Residential Aphasia Treatment and Education (PIRATE) in January 2009.
PIRATE is a clinical demonstration project that provides approximately 100 hours of
cognitive-linguistically oriented aphasia treatment to community dwelling Veterans over a
4-week period. PIRATE currently serves 18 Veterans per year in bi-monthly sessions. Resource
limitations associated with PIRATE and aphasia treatment in general require that treatments
be offered in the most cost-effective doses to those Veterans most likely to benefit from
them.
This treatment-effectiveness research study addresses these issues by examining the
dose-response relationship for semantically-oriented naming treatment, and identifying
cognitive, psycholinguistic and neuroanatomical predictors of treatment success. Study
participants (n=60, over a 4-year period) will be recruited nationwide from Veterans enrolled
in PIRATE. They will have their naming performance measured prior to PIRATE entry, during
each week of treatment, and at program exit/follow-up. A battery of cognitive measures and
structural magnetic resonance images of their brains will also be collected prior to
treatment. Participants' performance on trained and untrained lexical items and a
standardized measure of naming performance will be compared across time intervals to specify
the therapy amounts for which maximum treatment benefits are achieved. Their treatment
outcomes will also be correlated with specific cognitive test scores and the location and
extent of their brain lesions to identify cognitive and neurological markers predictive of
positive treatment response. Treatment response will also be compared across participants
with different psycholinguistic profiles, to determine which groups of patients show greatest
benefit from semantically-oriented naming treatment.
This study should provide answers to two interlocking questions: for whom is aphasia therapy
most effective, and how much of it is needed to optimize treatment outcomes. These answers
have the potential to set transformative new standards for how aphasia treatment is delivered
within VHA and to stroke survivors with aphasia more broadly.
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