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Comparing Smartphone Technology and a Memory Strategy on Improving Prospective Memory in Alzheimer's Disease

Using Smartphone Personal Assistant Technology to Improve Prospective Memory in Alzheimer's Disease

Status
Completed
Phases
NA
Study type
Interventional
Source
ClinicalTrials.gov
Registry ID
NCT03384043
Enrollment
52
Registered
2017-12-27
Start date
2018-01-08
Completion date
2020-02-28
Last updated
2020-07-08

For informational purposes only — not medical advice. Sourced from public registries and may not reflect the latest updates. Terms

Conditions

Alzheimer Disease, Cognitive Impairment, Mild, Dementia, Mild

Brief summary

Alzheimer's disease is a debilitating condition for patients and their caregivers marked by hallmark cognitive symptoms (e.g., memory loss) as well as an impact on quality of life. Researchers and clinicians are learning that a specific type of memory, called prospective memory, may be particularly affected in mild Alzheimer's disease. Prospective memory is memory for future intentions, goals, and chores, and the loss of the neurocognitive processes supporting prospective memory may reduce independent functioning (e.g., medication adherence). The current study investigates a technology-based intervention to assist participants with their daily prospective memory tasks. Participants with mild cognitive impairment and mild Alzheimer's disease will be trained to use a smartphone for four weeks. Smartphone acceptability, usability, and overall user experience will be measured. Furthermore, participants will be tested on completion of daily prospective memory tasks. In one group, participants will train to use the smartphone personal assistant reminder system, which reminds participants of their goals, tasks, and chores at the appropriate time or location. In a comparison group, participants will also carry a smartphone but will train to use a memory strategy in which they verbalize external cues to remind them to perform their goals, tasks, and chores. The goal of this research is to inform whether smartphone technology or a memory strategy can be used to reduce memory burden and improve daily, independent functioning in participants with mild Alzheimer's disease.

Interventions

BEHAVIORALSmartphone Personal Assistant

Electronic memory aids (e.g., pagers) are known to support memory for goals and intentions (prospective memory) in individuals with cognitive impairment. Smartphone technology has the potential to enhance the benefits of previous electronic memory aids because they can provide reminders not only at the correct time, but also at the correct location.

Verbally specifying when and where one intends to complete a goal or action (prospective memory) is known to improve the likelihood of later completing that prospective memory. The implementation intention is the best known memory strategy for prospective memory in patients with mild cognitive impairment.

Sponsors

National Institute on Aging (NIA)
CollaboratorNIH
Baylor University
Lead SponsorOTHER

Study design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Intervention model
PARALLEL
Primary purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
DOUBLE (Caregiver, Outcomes Assessor)

Eligibility

Sex/Gender
ALL
Healthy volunteers
No

Inclusion criteria

* Diagnosis of MCI or dementia at a neurology and/or neuropsychology office visit in the BSWH Temple region, or neuropsychology office visit in the RR BSWH region within 12 months of the study contact (Specific ICD Codes outlined below). * Interest in participating in research * Able and willing to bring a legally authorized representative (spouse or medical power of attorney) to initial training session. * Able to independently consent according to the results of a structured capacity to consent interview OR is interested after going through the consent process but does not pass capacity to consent inventory AND has a legally authorized representative available to provide proxy consent. * Presence of no more than mild dementia on the basis of telephone administered cognitive screening instrument (TICS-M) & Collateral/Informant ADL Measure o Using the TICS-M and published normative data, all subjects must have scores that are around -1 to -2 standard deviations for demographically corrected norms (National Institute of Aging-Alzheimer's Association recommended criteria for the very mild to mild stages of Alzheimer's disease; Albert et al., 2011; McKhann et al., 2011). * Etiology of the dementia or MCI can be varied or unknown at the time of the screening criteria.

Exclusion criteria

* Presence of severe cognitive impairment defined by a TICS-M score \<-2 standard deviations from the mean. * Semi-structured telephone clinical interview and/or chart review suggest: * Serious mental illness (schizophrenia, bipolar, or depression with suicidal ideation in the last 30 days) are present and significantly contributing to the current presentation * Uncorrected hearing loss, visual loss, or motoric dysfunction would preclude using the smartphone. * English language proficiency (whether due to English as a second language or the presence of aphasia) significantly interferes with completion of telephone screening procedures or would be clinically suspected to interfere with completion of the study process.

Design outcomes

Primary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Objective Prospective Memory PerformanceMeasured for 4 weeks.Performance on the experimenter-assigned time-based and event-based prospective memory tasks (number of tasks completed).

Secondary

MeasureTime frameDescription
Quality of Life - Ability to Participate in Social Roles and ActivitiesPre-Intervention and Post-Intervention (4 weeks)Participants will complete the Quality of Life in Neurological Disorders (Neuro-QOL) subscale titled Ability to Participate in Social Roles and Activities. This subscale has 8 items that are rated from Never to Always. The subscale total scores range from 8 (minimum) to 40 (maximum), with higher scores indicating better outcomes.
Quality of Life - Satisfaction with Social Roles and ActivitiesPre-Intervention and Post-Intervention (4 weeks)Participants will complete the Quality of Life in Neurological Disorders (Neuro-QOL) subscale titled Satisfaction with Social Roles and Activities. This subscale has 8 items that are rated from Not at All to Very Much. The subscale total scores range from 8 (minimum) to 40 (maximum), with higher scores indicating better outcomes.
Quality of Life - Cognitive FunctionPre-Intervention and Post-Intervention (4 weeks)Participants will complete the Quality of Life in Neurological Disorders (Neuro-QOL) subscale titled Cognitive Function. This subscale has 8 items. The first four items are rated from Never to Very Often, and the last four items are rated from No Difficulty to Cannot Do. The subscale total scores range from 8 (minimum) to 40 (maximum), with higher scores indicating better outcomes.
Subjective Memory Performance QuestionnairePre-Intervention and Post-Intervention (4 weeks)The Prospective and Retrospective Memory Questionnaire uses a 5-point scale to assess the frequency of retrospective and prospective memory failures such as forgetting to take a pill.
Quality of Life - Positive Affect and Well-BeingPre-Intervention and Post-Intervention (4 weeks)Participants will complete the Quality of Life in Neurological Disorders (Neuro-QOL) subscale titled Positive Affect and Well-Being. This subscale has 9 items that are rated from Never to Always. The subscale total scores range from 9 (minimum) to 45 (maximum), with higher scores indicating better outcomes
Use of Technology/StrategyMeasured for 4 weeksThe number of times the personal assistant feature and voice-recorder system were used.
Instrumental Activities of Daily LivingPre-Intervention and Post-Intervention (4 weeks)Scale on participants' ability to complete instrumental activities of daily living, such as housekeeping, financing, and medication activities.
Smartphone Acceptability/Usability ScalePre-Intervention and Post-Intervention (4 weeks)Scale to assess the acceptability and usability of the smartphone (Ben Zeev et al., 2014). The scale includes 26 items to which participants respond agree, neutral, or disagree, with agree indicating the favorable outcome on 21 items, and disagree indicating the favorable outcome on 5 items.
Training DurationPre-InterventionNumber of minutes to complete smartphone training
Perceived Memory Structured InterviewPre-Intervention and Post-Intervention (4 weeks)The experimenter will conduct a structured interview session at baseline to determine participants' most important, common, and challenging prospective memory tasks. At follow-up, participants will rate whether each memory issue described at baseline was much worse (1), worse (2), normal (3), better (4), or much better (5) than usual over the last month.

Countries

United States

Outcome results

None listed

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov · Data processed: Feb 21, 2026