Many individuals develop dementia, and dementia has multiple causes, yet we currently have limited treatment options. A critical observation of the effectiveness of the available dementia treatments is that they tend to be more effective when started early. Previous studies have shown that multimodal lifestyle interventions can significantly delay the onset of Alzheimer's dementia in individuals with high risk for Alzheimer's or with Mild Cognitive Impairment (MCI). These interventions may be less effective when initiated after dementia has already been diagnosed or is more advanced. This study has two primary goals. The first goal is to assess attitudes around dementia risk for participants throughout the study as they learn of their personalized risk and possible lifestyle factors that may modify that risk. The second goal is to serve as a logistical pilot for the implementation of data collection and processing and multimodal lifestyle intervention to reduce the risk factors of dementia in individuals without current cognitive impairment but who are at high risk of progression to dementia. Secondary goals of this study include better defining what factors contribute the most risk to dementia and identifying sub-types of dementia defined by different genetic and molecular risk factors.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
PREVENTION
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
200
The intervention supports adoption and maintenance of healthy behaviors including healthy nutrition The Mediterranean-DASH (Dietary Approaches to Stop Hypertension) Intervention for Neurodegenerative Delay, or MIND Diet), physical activity (150 min/week of moderate activity), stress management, weight management, and adherence to doctor-prescribed medical regimens. In addition, participants will be encouraged to participate regularly in social and learning activities, and to engage in cognitive training via Posit's BrainHQ web-based training tools (brainhq.com). Participants will be supported by telephone-based health coaching. Coaches will be currently licensed allied health providers such as Registered Dietitians. Using the combination of an individual's biological data (including genomics, blood, stool, saliva, etc.), activity data, behavioral data, and other incoming streams of health information, the coach will tailor the lifestyle intervention for each participant.
Smith Family Clinic for Genomic Medicine
Huntsville, Alabama, United States
RECRUITINGAttitudes around dementia risk for participants throughout the study as they learn of their personalized risk and possible lifestyle factors that may modify that risk.
All participants will be offered a survey about perception of and attitudes toward dementia risk using the scaling strategy described by Kasparian and colleagues and dementia questions from Kim and colleagues (see references).
Time frame: At enrollment (week -26 to week -4), at return of results visit indicating level of dementia risk (week 0), and (for participant that qualify for the multimodal lifestyle intervention arm) at week 26.
REVEAL Impact of Genetics Testing in Alzheimer's Disease Distress Subscale
Participants identified as high risk (multimodal lifestyle intervention arm) will be asked to complete the REVEAL (Risk Evaluation and Education for Alzheimer's Disease) Impact of Genetics Testing in Alzheimer's Disease (IGT-AD) Distress Subscale. The scale is 12 items on a Likert scale, with higher scores indicating more distress.
Time frame: Week 1 and Week 26 (1 week after return of results visit, and also at final site visit).
pTau217 level
Level of pTau217 (picograms/milliliter, pg/mL). Limit of quantification 0.06 pg/mL, assay detection limit 0.03 pg/mL, threshold \>0.18 pg/mL indicated as a surrogate marker for beta amyloid pathology, no upper bound specified by testing lab (labcorp). Higher scores indicate a worse outcome.
Time frame: Measured at screening (week -26 to -4), and, for high risk participants, at enrollment for intervention (week 0) as well as at 26 weeks into completing a multimodal lifestyle intervention.
MoCA score
Montreal Cognitive Assessment. Range 0-30. Lower scores correlate with more cognitive impairment. Study threshold for possible mild cognitive impairment (MCI) set at \<25, but in this secondary outcome measure MoCA score will be evaluated as a continuous value. Lower scores indicate a worse outcome.
Time frame: Measured at screening (week -26 to -4), and, for high risk participants, at enrollment for intervention (week 0) as well as at 26 weeks into completing a multimodal lifestyle intervention.
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