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RecruitingNCT04029623

Partnered Rhythmic Rehabilitation in Prodromal Alzheimer's Disease

Partnered Rhythmic Rehabilitation for Enhanced Motor-Cognition in Prodromal Alzheimer's Disease

Status
Recruiting
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
66 (estimated)
Sponsor
Emory University · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
50 Years – 80 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Interventions that affect many different aspects of human ability rather than just one aspect of human health are more likely to be successful in preventing and treating Alzheimer's disease (AD). Functional decline in AD is severely impacted by impaired ability to do physical actions while having to make decisions and concentrating, something scientists call motor-cognitive integration. Combined motor and cognitive training has been recommended for people with early AD, thus this study will use partnered, rhythmic rehabilitation (PRR), as an intervention to simultaneously target cardiovascular, social and motor-cognitive domains important to AD. PRR is moderate intensity, cognitively-engaging social dance that targets postural control systems, involves learning multiple, varied stepping and rhythmic patterns, and fosters tactile communication of motor goals between partners, enhancing social interaction's effect on cognition. Previous research demonstrates that PRR classes are safe and result in no injurious falls. This study is a 12-month long Phase II single- blind randomized clinical trial using PRR in 66 patients with early AD. Participants with early AD will be randomly assigned to participate in PRR or a walking program for three months of biweekly sessions, followed by nine months of weekly sessions of PRR or walking. The overarching hypothesis is that PRR is safe, tolerable and associated with improved motor-cognitive function, and brain (neuronal), vascular (blood vessels) and inflammatory biomarkers that might affect function.

Detailed description

For people with early Alzheimer's disease (AD), treatment options to prevent declined function are extremely limited, because AD affects many areas of function. In early AD, people may have trouble physically doing things while also thinking, which is necessary for many activities in daily life. This problem might be helped by doing activities that challenge the mind and the body at the same time. Partnered rhythmic rehabilitation (PRR), which targets fitness, cognition, mobility and social engagement and may prevent future functional problems in AD. This is a phase II single-blind randomized clinical trial to assess the safety, tolerability, and efficacy of PRR in individuals in the early stages of AD, also called prodromal AD (pAD) . Participants will be randomly assigned to 90-minute PRR or WALK classes. Both interventions will receive equal contact and monitoring from study staff. Participants will have two phases of intervention. In the three-month Training phase, participants will be assigned to 20, biweekly (90-minute) lessons over 12 weeks. In the nine-month Maintenance phase, participants will attend weekly lessons at least 3 times per month. Participants will undergo either PRR or Walking Exercise (WALK) interventions for one year, which will use de-escalating doses: two times per week for three months (Training) and weekly for nine months (Maintenance). The first study aim is to determine acceptability, safety, tolerability and satisfaction with PRR in pAD. The second aim is to determine a) efficacy of PRR vs. WALK for improving motor-cognitive integration in pAD; b) to identify sensitive endpoints to power a future phase III trial. The researchers will also explore potential mechanisms by which PRR affects pAD. These mechanisms include functional brain measures, vascular, and inflammation measures (arterial stiffness; cerebral perfusion, task functional magnetic resonance imaging \[fMRI\]; inflammatory markers: cytokines and chemokines, endothelial adhesion markers.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERPartnered Rhythmic Rehabilitation (PRR)Partnered Rhythmic Rehabilitation (PRR) is moderate intensity, cognitively-engaging social dance that targets postural control systems. PRR involves learning complex stepping patterns and fosters tactile communication of motor goals between partners, enhancing social interaction's effect on cognition. Class sizes will consist of 10 or fewer pairs of participants with pAD and partners to maximize safety. Participants will engage in partnering exercises on how to interpret motor goals through touch, exercises to develop understanding of temporal relationship of movement to music, novel step introduction, connecting previously learned and novel step elements. Classes include practicing previously-learned steps, a 20-minute standing warm-up, and partnering and rhythmic enhancement exercises.
OTHERGroup walking (WALK)WALK sessions consist of 10 minutes of warm-up, and evaluation/tips for practicing safe walking form mechanics (i.e., head up, shoulders relaxed, abdominals engaged, heel strike, roll and toe off; keep natural stride length, and speed up cadence if increased speed is desired), 55 minutes of walking with breaks, and 20 minutes of balance and stretching. WALK will take place in small groups with research assistants and trained family members and/or caregivers to control for social effects/contact of intervention. Participants of similar walking abilities will be 'buddied' with research assistants and trained physical therapy students who will act as group backmarkers, although participants will lead the pace. WALK participants will keep walking logs documenting their progress. WALK is expected to expend 3 metabolic equivalents (METs), like that of PRR.

Timeline

Start date
2019-10-29
Primary completion
2026-07-01
Completion
2026-07-01
First posted
2019-07-23
Last updated
2025-04-23

Locations

1 site across 1 country: United States

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04029623. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.