Primary progressive aphasia (PPA) is an umbrella term used to refer to several clinical variants that manifest as an insidious deterioration of speech/language skills, usually due to frontotemporal lobar degeneration and/or Alzheimer's disease. Consensus criteria have been proposed by an international community regarding the sub-classification of PPA into three variants: (1) semantic variant PPA, characterized by impaired confrontation naming and single-word comprehension; (2) logopenic variant PPA), characterised by word-finding difficulties and sentence repetition deficits; and (3) non-fluent variant, characterised by agrammatism with or without apraxia of speech. Speech and language therapists (SLTs) play a crucial role in the diagnostic process and in setting a therapeutic path along with monitoring the evolution of the clinical picture. Despite growing evidence supporting the benefits of speech-language intervention, the frequency with which individuals with PPA are referred for speech and language services, is suboptimal likely due to skepticism regarding the value of speech and language therapy in the context of neurodegeneration, the scarcity of SLTs with expertise in the treatment of PPA, the lack of awareness regarding the role of the SLT amongst referrers, and the geographical barriers that impede access to in-person speech and language services. In Italy, patients with PPA are rarely offered treatment options due to a lack of understanding of the disorder on the part of health professionals and erroneous assumptions regarding the utility of treatment in patients facing a worsening prognosis. The primary aim of this pilot study is to develop tailored speech and language interventions for patients with different variants of PPA by addressing their linguistic and cognitive difficulties. Secondly, to explore the intervention's effect also on untreated tasks and assess the long-term maintenance of the proposed interventions by monitoring patients for up to six months. Finally, in each PPA variant, the investigators aim to investigate which variables among the sociodemographic, clinical, linguistic/cognitive, and brain MRI features at baseline predict successful clinical results, as well as which structural and functional brain changes are associated with speech and language improvements.
A total of 30 PPA patients will be recruited, with a clinical and imaging-supported diagnosis of PPA according to the current diagnostic criteria, and MMSE\>15. At the study entry (T0), all patients will undergo a clinical interview, a neurological and neuropsychological evaluation, and a speech and language assessment. All these visits will be repeated soon after the intervention (at week 5, W5), at 3 months (M3), and at 6 months (M6) post-intervention. Specifically, measures of patient's and caregivers' satisfaction and patients' functional communication abilities will be collected as primary outcomes. At baseline (T0) and after intervention (W5), all patients recruited at IRCCS San Raffaele and 40% of patients recruited at IRCCS Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institute will also perform a brain structural and functional MRI. Thirty healthy controls, matched with PPA cases for age and sex, will be also recruited. Only at baseline (T0), all controls will undergo the same visits as the PPA patients, as well as the brain MRI scan. IRCCS Maugeri Clinical and Scientific Institute will be specifically in charge of the development of the SLT protocols, for the online administration of tailored speech and language interventions and for data analysis. IRCCS Ospedale San Raffaele Milano will be specifically in charge of brain structural and functional MRI acquisition, the definition of task-based functional MRI paradigms, and MRI analysis. This unit will also recruit and collect data on the entire sample of healthy controls. Brain structural and functional changes associated with SLT interventions using the most advanced MRI techniques will be investigated. The sociodemographic, clinical, language, speech, and MRI features obtained in patients will be processed through machine learning to develop a computation paradigm that better defines their prediction value for the intervention's efficacy.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
30
The SLT intervention will be entirely administered online through a web-based platform. While each of the treatments will engage semantics, phonology, and orthography, the protocols will be tailored relative to the characteristics of each PPA variant. Patients with svPPA and lvPPA will undergo a lexical retrieval training (LRT) intervention implemented using a training cascade. Patients with nfvPPA will undergo Video-implemented Script Training (VISTA), a choral reading approach training accurate production of functional scripts. The method is based on that implemented in American-English individuals with PPA and aims at improving grammar and motor aspects of speech production by taking advantage of repetitive practice and automaticity.
Istituti Clinici Scientifici Maugeri IRCCS
Bari, Italy
RECRUITINGIRCCS Ospedale San Raffaele
Milan, Italy
RECRUITINGChange in measure of naming after Lexical Retrieval Training (LRT)
Number of correct spoken and written naming of trained and untrained items for patients undergoing the LRT treatment (lvPPA/svPPA)
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in number of articulatory and grammatical errors
The percentage of script words produced correctly for VISTA for trained and untrained scripts.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measures of patients and caregivers satisfaction and patients functional communication abilities
A Likert scale evaluating relevant categories of functional verbal communication skills in daily situations will be used. The score ranges from 0 - 30. High scores are more favorable, meaning that high scores indicate less interference in participation. The summary scores will be converted to IRT theta values (logit scale). On the logit scale, scores range from -3.0 to +3.0 with 0 logits representing the mean for the calibration sample. High scores are preferable.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change on untrained probes within each clinical variant
Number of untrained items correctly identified
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of oral production as assessed by Picture description subtests
To examine the informativeness and efficiency of communication from the connected speech sampled with the Nicholas and Brookshire (1993) picture description task and the Screening for Aphasia in Neurodegeneration (SAND) picture task.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of quality of life as assessed by Communication Outcome After Stroke (COAST)
Communication Outcome After Stroke (COAST) is a measure of the functional communication in daily activities and of the impact of the quality of life point of view of aphasia patient (COAST total score range: min= 0, max= 80, higher score=better outcome) and their carer (Carer COAST total score range: min= 0, max= 80, higher score=better outcome)
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of naming as assessed by Picture Naming subtest from Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND)
Picture Naming subtest from Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND) provides total score (score range: min= 0, max= 14, higher score=better outcome), living score (score range: min= 0, max= 7, higher score=better outcome) and non-living score (score range: min= 0, max= 7, higher score=better outcome).
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of comprehension as assessed by Auditory sentence comprehension subtest from Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND)
Auditory sentence comprehension subtest from Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND): total score range: min= 0, max= 8, higher score=better outcome.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of comprehension as assessed by Single-word comprehension subtest from Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND)
Single-word comprehension subtest from Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND) provides total score (score range: min= 0, max= 12, higher score=better outcome), living score (score range: min= 0, max= 6, higher score=better outcome) and non-living score (score range: min= 0, max= 6, higher score=better outcome).
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of repetition as assessed by Repetition subtest from Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND)
Repetition subtest from Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND) provides total score (score range: min= 0, max= 10, higher score=better outcome), words score (score range: min= 0, max= 6, higher score=better outcome) and non-words score (score range: min= 0, max= 4, higher score=better outcome).
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of repetition as assessed by Sentence repetition subtest from Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND)
Sentence repetition subtest from Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND) provides total score (score range: min= 0, max= 6, higher score=better outcome), predictable sentences score (score range: min= 0, max= 3, higher score=better outcome) and unpredictable sentences score (score range: min= 0, max= 3, higher score=better outcome).
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of reading as assessed by Reading subtest from Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND)
Reading subtest from Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND) provides total score (score range: min= 0, max= 16, higher score=better outcome), words score (score range: min= 0, max= 12, higher score=better outcome) and non-words score (score range: min= 0, max= 4, higher score=better outcome).
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of writing as assessed by Writing subtest from Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND)
Writing subtest from Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND) provides Information Units score (score range: min= 0, max= 6, higher score=better outcome), total number of words score (score range: min= 0, max= no limits, higher score=better outcome), number of nouns/total number of words score (score range: min= 0, max= 1, higher score=better outcome), number of verbs/total number of words (score range: min= 0, max= 1, higher score=better outcome), number of correct syntactic structures/total number of syntactic structures score (score range: min= 0, max= 1, higher score=better outcome), number of orthographic errors score (score range: min= 0, max= no limits, higher score=worse outcome), number of lexico-semantic errors/number of words score (score range: min= 0, max= 1, higher score=worse outcome).
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of semantics as assessed by Semantic association subtest from Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND)
Semantic association subtest from Screening for Aphasia in NeuroDegeneration (SAND): total score range: min= 0, max= 4, higher score=better outcome.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of naming as assessed by Subtest from CAGI battery
Naming subtest from CAGI: score range: min= 0, max= 48, higher score=better outcome.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of comprehension as assessed by Single-word comprehension subtest from CAGI
Single-word comprehension subtest from CAGI: score range: min= 0, max= 48, higher score=better outcome.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of Sentence Production as measured by Northwestern Anagram Test-Italian (Nat-I)
The NAT-I is a 22-item test: score range: min= 0, max= 22, higher score=better outcome.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of comprehension as assessed by Sentence Comprehension Task
Sentence Comprehension Task: total score range: min= 0, max= 48, higher score=better outcome.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in in measure of verb and sentence processing as measured by the Italian version of the Northwestern Assessment of Verbs and Sentences (NAVS-I)
NAVS-I encompasses three subtests: Verb Naming Task (VNT), Verb Comprehension Task (VCT), and Argument Structure Production Task (ASPT).
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of semantics as assessed by Semantic association Test (SAT)
SAT: total score range: min= 0, max= 76, higher score=better outcome.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of repetition as assessed by Repetition subtest from Esame Neuropsicologico per l'Afasia (ENPA)
Repetition subtest from ENPA: score range: min= 0, max= 15, higher score=better outcome.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of repetition as assessed by Repetition subtest from Aachener Aphasie Test (AAT)
Repetition subtest from AAT: score range: min= 0, max= 150, higher score=better outcome.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Changes in measures of motor speech as assessed by the Motor Speech Evaluation (MSE)
Motor Speech Evaluation (MSE) score range: min= 0, max= 30, higher score=better outcome.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measures of Verbal fluency as measured by Phonemic Fluency Test and Semantic Fluency Test
Phonemic Fluency Test: higher score= better outcome. Semantic Fluency Test: higher score= better outcome.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in measure of global cognitive impairment as assessed by Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE)
Mini Mental State Examination (MMSE): score range: min= 0, max= 30, higher score=better outcome.
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Change in dementia severity as assessed by Frontotemporal Dementia- Clinical Dementia Rating Scale (FTD-CDR)- Sum of Boxes
Frontotemporal Dementia- Clinical Dementia Rating Scale (FTD-CDR)- Sum of Boxes (score range: min= 0, max= 24, higher score=worse outcome).
Time frame: From enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks, 3 Months and 6 Months
Structural MRI scan
Measure of global and regional volumes of interest (such as whole brain and temporal lobes). Tissue health (from structural scan) will be obtained at baseline to investigate neural predictors of treatment outcome.
Time frame: At baseline, from enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks
Functional MRI scan
Task-based activation location (from functional MRI scans) will be obtained at baseline to investigate neural predictors of treatment outcome. Connectivity between brain regions measured using diffusion tensor MRI and resting state functional MRI.
Time frame: At baseline, from enrollment to the end of treatment at 5 weeks
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