DECISION Study - Summary Title: Decision-making, Ethical Consent, and Interactive Dialogue in Ongoing Neurocognitive Decline The DECISION study aims to develop and validate a simplified yet robust tool for assessing the capacity to give informed consent in patients with Alzheimer's disease and related dementias. Existing tools like the MacCAT-T are too complex for routine use, so this project focuses on creating a user-friendly, valid alternative that addresses language, attention, insight, judgment, and decision-making. The study uses a multi-phase approach including: * Development and validation of a new consent capacity test battery * Correlation of cognitive decline with brain changes and biomarkers (MRI, OCT, plasma markers) * Ethical, legal, and co-design perspectives to ensure practical and responsible application The target group includes 100-150 participants from earlier dementia studies. The ultimate goal is to establish a clinically usable, legally sound instrument for assessing consent capacity in individuals with cognitive impairments.
Title: DECISION Study: Ethical Consent and Cognitive Decline Assessment in Dementia Detailed Study Description (Design-Focused) 1. Background and Rationale The ability to provide informed consent is central to ethical research participation and clinical decision-making. However, in individuals with neurocognitive disorders, such as Alzheimer's disease (AD), frontotemporal dementia (FTD), or vascular dementia, this capacity is often compromised. The fluctuating nature of cognitive symptoms, especially in early and mixed dementia presentations, complicates standardized assessments. Currently used instruments, such as the MacArthur Competence Assessment Tool for Treatment (MacCAT-T), are comprehensive but not suited for rapid clinical decision-making or large-scale implementation. Emerging therapeutic interventions and increased demand for early diagnosis necessitate scalable, valid instruments to assess capacity. DECISION seeks to close this gap by developing a tool grounded in neuropsychological theory, clinical practicality, and ethical and legal acceptability. 2. Objectives Primary Objective: • Develop a standardized, brief, and reusable tool to assess capacity to consent in individuals with neurocognitive disorders. Secondary Objectives: * Validate the tool against established standards (e.g., MacCAT-T). * Examine the relationship between cognitive domains (e.g., language, attention) and decision-making. * Investigate correlations between neurodegenerative and vascular biomarkers and consent capacity. 3. Study Design The DECISION study is structured as a two-phase, prospective cohort study with mixed-methods integration. Phase 1: Tool Development and Validation * Sample: 100-150 participants (patients with varying dementia subtypes and healthy controls). * Methodology: * Comprehensive neuropsychological profiling * Test item development from domains critical to decision-making (attention, executive function, language comprehension, risk assessment) * Use of MacCAT-T and Clinical Dementia Rating (CDR) for validation * Comparison of subjective and informant-reported measures (e.g., Cognitive Failures Questionnaire, Dysexecutive Questionnaire) * Output: A modular test battery with a shortened, clinically usable version Phase 2: Neurobiological Correlates * Objective: Identify biomarkers associated with impaired consent capacity * Biomarkers: * Blood-based (e.g., pTau217, NfL, GFAP, Aβ1-42/1-40) * Structural MRI (temporal, frontal, and parietal regions) * Optical coherence tomography (OCT) for retinal changes * Analysis: Correlation with DECISION test battery performance and clinical indicators 4. Recruitment Strategy Participants will be selected from previous cohorts (AmyClear and ActiGlia), allowing access to existing CSF, PET, and neuropsychological data. All participants will be re-consented and evaluated using standardized tools at baseline. If capacity is limited, a legal guardian or proxy will be engaged per ethical protocols. 5. Inclusion/Exclusion Criteria * Adults aged 50+ * Diagnosed or suspected cognitive impairment (per ICD-10 criteria) * Able to provide consent or have a legal representative * No severe sensory impairments interfering with testing 6. Ethical Framework The study follows the Declaration of Helsinki and German civil law (BGB). All assessments are designed to be minimally invasive, with an emphasis on autonomy, transparency, and participant safety. Focus groups with medical professionals and interviews with patients will inform test development. 7. Co-Design and Participatory Approach Patients and caregivers contribute to item design and language accessibility. Medical professionals help ensure clinical relevance. Legal advisors assess conformity with consent standards. 8. Outcomes and Statistical Analysis * Primary endpoint: Validity and reliability of the new tool compared to MacCAT-T * Secondary endpoints: Biomarker correlations, subgroup analyses (e.g., dementia type, anosognosia presence) * Analytical methods: Correlation, regression, factor analysis, ROC curves, AUC calculations 9. Data Handling and Security Data will be pseudonymized and stored within the MeDICLMU infrastructure. Personal identifiers are kept separate and encrypted. Access is limited to the study team. Data usage will comply with GDPR. 10. Timeline * Study start: September 2025 * End of recruitment: March 2026 * Final assessments and analysis: March 2027 11. Dissemination Results will be published in peer-reviewed journals and presented at international conferences. A clinical guideline for using the consent assessment tool will be developed. Conclusion The DECISION study aims to create a scalable, evidence-based tool for assessing capacity to consent in cognitively impaired individuals. Its integration of neuropsychology, clinical practice, ethics, and biology positions it as a model for future dementia care and research protocols.
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
100
Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, LMU Hospital
Munich, Bavaria, Germany
Development and Validation of a Consent Capacity Assessment Tool in Neurocognitive Disorders
Development and validation of a brief, standardized tool to assess decision-making and consent capacity in individuals with neurocognitive disorders, benchmarked against the MacCAT-T and supported by cognitive, behavioral, and biomarker data.
Time frame: 09/25 - 09/26
Correlation Between Consent Capacity and Neurobiological Markers
Secondary Outcome Description (max 250 characters): Examine associations between consent capacity scores and neurobiological markers, including plasma biomarkers (e.g., pTau217, NfL, GFAP) and retinal imaging findings (e.g., pRNFL, GCL) obtained via OCT in collaboration with the ophthalmology department.
Time frame: 09/25 - 09/26
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