Loss of cognitive abilities leading to Alzheimer's disease is progressive and destructive, leaving older adults disabled and unable to recall their past. The number of older adults with Alzheimer's disease is expected to triple by the year 2050, yet little research examines amyloid beta deposition, executive function, and progression of disability. This study will test the influence of a novel and promising non-pharmacological intervention, Strategy Training, on the progression of disability in a sample of 150 older adults with Mild Cognitive Impairment who have the option to complete a Positron Emission Tomography (PET) Imaging with Pittsburgh Compound B (PiB).
This trial will test the effect of Strategy Training compared to Enhanced Usual Care on change in disability among older adults with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI) and assess the extent to which Central Nervous System amyloid-beta deposition and neurocognitive function modify the relationship between Strategy Training and Enhanced Usual Care on change in disability. Assessments will be obtained at Baseline, 8 week short assessment, 6 and 12 months post intervention. Interventions, such as Strategy Training, focused on slowing emergence of disability despite underlying pathology may keep older adults as engaged in meaningful daily activities for as long as possible. This project tests a novel and promising non-pharmacological intervention and will inform our understanding of important effect modifiers- amyloid beta deposition and executive function- on change in performance of cognitively challenging daily activities. Enhancing our understanding of amyloid beta deposition, executive function, disability, and a promising non-pharmacological intervention could support aging for millions of older adults who, in the near future, will experience disability related to MCI.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
TREATMENT
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
Occupational therapists deliver Strategy Training to older adults virtually. Strategy training optimizes engagement in meaningful daily activities through generating self-selected goals, monitoring daily activities, scheduling activities, and problem-solving solutions to barriers experienced when engaging in activities.
In this comparison condition, usual care will be enhanced by connecting older adults with MCI to resources available to meet their needs, and notify appropriate physicians when required. Enhanced Usual Care provides a usual care comparison while providing the participants with close monitoring of changes in symptoms.
University of Pittsburgh
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States
Change in disability
Disability will be measured with the Performance Assessment of Self-Care Skills (PASS) through standardized, criterion-referenced performance assessment of cognitively challenging daily activities (i.e., shopping, bill paying, checkbook balancing, bill mailing, telephone use, medication management, critical information retrieval, and small device repair). A trained and blinded assessor will provide instruction and then observe participants performing each task. If the participant demonstrates difficulty, the assessor provides cues to assist. Assessors will rate disability based on the number of cues needed by the participants to complete the tasks. A higher score indicates more cues provided to complete the tasks or disability. The number of cues required for each task will be combined for a total number of cues provided on all 8 tasks. The outcome will be reported with a mean number of cues provided (range 0-300).
Time frame: Baseline to Month 12
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