Traumatic Brain Injury Clinical Trial
— SMARTOfficial title:
Strategic Memory and Reasoning Training for Cognitive Problems Due to Mild Traumatic Brain Injury and Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
NCT number | NCT04554537 |
Other study ID # | SMART |
Secondary ID | |
Status | Completed |
Phase | N/A |
First received | |
Last updated | |
Start date | May 2016 |
Est. completion date | November 2019 |
Verified date | September 2020 |
Source | University of Colorado, Colorado Springs |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Interventional |
The focus of this study is to test a treatment program (Strategic Memory Advanced Reasoning
Training; SMART) that was developed to address specific brain functions found to be crucial
for the recovery following traumatic brain injury (TBI). New research has shown that when
these very specific brain functions are targeted, such as ability to focus on a task while
ignoring irrelevant information, brain changes are more significant. SMART emphasizes
top-down processing by targeting focused attention, assimilation of information, and mental
flexibility and innovation, all higher-order cognitive functions driven by the frontal lobes.
Evidence from other top-down cognitive training programs demonstrates their effectiveness in
improving cognitive and daily functioning in individuals reporting a TBI. In addition to
improving frontal lobe capacity, SMART has also been shown to increase brain blood flow
critical for complex thinking and strengthen white matter integrity. The effectiveness of
SMART has been extensively tested with a variety of populations, including healthy adults and
adolescents, adolescents with brain injuries, healthy seniors and those at risk for
Alzheimers, and veterans and civilians with lingering impairment following TBIs. This will be
the first study to test its effectiveness with individuals with mild TBI (MTBI) and
posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD).
The SMART program has previously been tested with patients with TBI using an 18-hour training
format. When compared to the Brain Health Workshop (BHW), an education-based active learning
module, participants in the SMART group (n = 31) demonstrated improvements in gist reasoning,
executive function, and memory, generalization of improvement to daily functioning activities
and continuation of these gains 6 months posttraining. The training consisted of 15 hours of
training conducted over 10 group sessions in the first 5 weeks and a final 3 hours of
training at spaced intervals over the next 3 weeks. SMART training has not been tested with
patients with PTSD-related neuropsychological impairments. The purpose of the current study
is to investigate the efficacy of a shortened training program (9 hours) in improving
neurocognitive function in patients with mTBI and/or PTSD.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 100 |
Est. completion date | November 2019 |
Est. primary completion date | May 2019 |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 19 Years to 65 Years |
Eligibility |
Inclusion Criteria:Inclusion criteria include . - adults between the ages of 19 to 65 years - speak and comprehend English, as not all of the standardized cognitive tests have been normed for non-English speakers - diagnosis of either mild or moderate TBI (as defined by OSU TBI interview) and/or diagnosis of subthreshold or full PTSD (as determined by Clinician-Administered PTSD Scale) Exclusion Criteria: - someone who is not proficient in reading, comprehending, and speaking English - self-report on phone screen interview of pre-existing cerebral palsy, intellectual disability, autism, epilepsy, schizophrenia, stroke, pervasive developmental disorder, or a diagnosed learning disability - history of psychotic disorder or bipolar disorder (by self-report) - current alcohol or drug dependence (by self-report) - severe TBI (determined by OSU TBI interview) - participants who are determined by the TOMM (more than five errors on Trial 2 or the Retention trial) to be malingering neuropsychological problems - neuropsychological testing or r any cognitive training in the past 3 months as this could introduce practice effects. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
n/a |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
Dr. Kristin Samuelson |
Type | Measure | Description | Time frame | Safety issue |
---|---|---|---|---|
Primary | CHANGE in Digit Span test of the Wechsler Adult Intelligence Scale - Fourth Edition | Digit Span requires participants to repeat digits forwards, backwards, and sequences in ascending order; the combined score of these three tasks was used, which is then converted to a scaled score with a range of 1 to 19. Higher scores represent better performance. | Pre-training, immediately post-training and six months later | |
Primary | CHANGE in Digit Symbol and Symbol Search tests, which comprise the Processing Speed Index of the WAIS-IV | To assess processing speed and visual-motor coordination. The Processing Speed Index is a standard score with a range of 50 to 150 with higher scores indicating better performance. | Pre-training, immediately post-training and six months later | |
Primary | CHANGE in California Verbal Learning Test | Participants hear a word list over five trials and repeat back as many words as they can remember; the sum of trials 1-5 serves as a measure of immediate verbal memory and the delayed memory for the words 20 minutes later serves as a measure of delayed verbal memory. Scores are converted from raw scores to T scores. T scores have a range of 20 to 80, with higher scores representing bettery performance. | Pre-training, immediately post-training and six months later | |
Primary | CHANGE in Logical Memory task of the Wechsler Memory Scale, 4th edition | assess verbal learning and memory in a narrative context. Participants were presented with a short story and asked to repeat back as much of the story as possible immediately after. Details of the stories are totaled and raw scores are converted to scaled scores. Both immediate memory and delayed memory received a scaled score, range from 1 to 19 with higher scores indicating better performance. | Pre-training, immediately post-training and six months later | |
Primary | CHANGE in Brief Visuospatial Memory Test-Revised | a measure of immediate and delayed visuospatial memory. The participant must memorize a series of designs over three trials and recreate them from memory, both immediately following display and after a delay of 20 minutes. A sum of Trials 1-3 represents the immediate raw score which is then converted to a T score. The T scores have a range of 20 to 80, with higher scores indicating better performance. | Pre-training, immediately post-training and six months later | |
Primary | CHANGE in Trail Making Test of the Delis-Kaplan Executive Functioning System | Assess cognitive flexibility, verbal fluency, inhibitory control. There are five conditions, and the final condition, the "switching condition" is the score used. It is a measure of seconds taken to complete the task which is then converted to a scaled score, with a range of 1 to 19, with higher scores representing better performance. | Pre-training, immediately post-training and six months later | |
Primary | CHANGE in Test of Strategic Learning | The TOSL involves synthesizing gist meaning from complex information. Participants read a complex passage and are instructed to generate a high-level summary of what they read. Three scores are generated and are presented as raw scores, with higher scores indicating better performance. The summary abstraction score reflects the total number of accurately abstracted meanings from the reading; the high-level lessons score measures the number of high-level lessons the participants gleaned from the story; and the detail total score measures participants' memory for the story's detail-based information. | Pre-training, immediately post-training and six months later | |
Primary | CHANGE in Neurobehavioral Symptom Inventory (NSI) | 22-item self-report measure of postconcussive symptoms. We specifically examined the Cognitive subscale of the NSI at all time points. The range for this scale is 0 to 20, with higher scores indicating more self-reported impairment | Pre-training, immediately post-training and six months later | |
Primary | CHANGE in Clinician Administered PTSD Scale for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual (DSM)-5 | Assesses posttraumatic stress diagnosis and symptoms. Range of scores is 0 to 80 with higher scores indicating higher PTSD symptom severity. | Pre-training, immediately post-training and six months later | |
Primary | CHANGE in Paced Auditory Serial Addition Test | To assess working memory, sustained attention, and divided attention, participants were asked to listen to an audio tape presenting a series of single-digit numbers and then state aloud the sum of the number more recently presented plus the number preceding it. There were two trials and the number of correct answers for both trials is summed. Higher scores indicated better performance. | Pre-training, immediately post-training and six months later | |
Primary | CHANGE in Continuous Performance Test performance | To assess sustained attention, vigilance, inhibitory control, and inattention, the computer-based Conners' Continuous Performance Test 3rd Edition was administered. Errors of omission are a measure of sustained attention and errors of commission are a measure of inhibitory control. Raw scores are converted to T scores. Higher scores indicate more omissions and commissions, or poorer performance. | Pre-training, immediately post-training and six months later | |
Primary | CHANGE in Delis-Kaplan Executive Functioning System Color-Word Interference Test performance | To assess change in inhibitory control and cognitive flexibility, the "interference condition" of the Color-Word Test was used. Raw scores are converted to scaled scores, with a range of 1 to 19 with higher scores representing better performance. | Pre-training, immediately post-training and six months later | |
Primary | CHANGE in Delis-Kaplan Executive Functioning System Verbal Fluency performance | To assess change in verbal fluency, two tasks were administered: the Letter Fluency subtest and the Category Fluency subtest. Raw scores are converted into scaled scores, with a range of 1 to 19 with higher scores representing better performance. | Pre-training, immediately post-training and six months later | |
Secondary | Change in subjective cognitive complaints | To assess change in subjective cognitive complaints, the Cognitive Self-Report Questionnaire was administered. Total score from the cognitive subscale will be used, with scores ranging from 12 to 60. Higher scores represent more cognitive complaints. | Pre-training, immediately post-training and six months later | |
Secondary | Change in Quality of Life | To assess change in quality of life, the World Health Organization Quality of Life Scale was administered. The total score was used, which ranges from 25 to 125, with higher scores indicating higher quality of life and functioning across domains | Pre-training, immediately post-training and six months later |
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