Trials / Terminated
TerminatedNCT05062512
Health in Aging, Neurodegenerative Diseases and Dementias In Ontario
- Status
- Terminated
- Phase
- —
- Study type
- Observational
- Enrollment
- 250 (actual)
- Sponsor
- Ontario Neurodegeneration Disease Research Initiative · Academic / Other
- Sex
- All
- Age
- 18 Years
- Healthy volunteers
- Accepted
Summary
The Health in Aging, Neurodegenerative Diseases and DementiaS in ONTario (HANDDS-ONT) Study is an observational study that takes place in the comfort of participant's home, with no study visits occurring in a clinic. The study is recruiting people living with a neurodegenerative disease or the effects of stroke, along with healthy, aging individuals. Studying both groups will help ONDRI researchers to: 1. understand how the diseases affect different people 2. discover ways to potentially detect diseases earlier 3. find ways to help people manage their daily health related behaviours Participant data is collected virtually through wearables - small sensors worn on the wrist, ankle and chest -- for 7-10 days, as participants go about their daily activities. Data is also collected from questionnaires regarding mood and quality of life. Blood samples will be collected to understand how one's genetic makeup could provide for earlier detection of some conditions, and for analysis of certain risk factors. Combining the information from the sensors (walking patterns, sleep, heart rate/rhythm, etc.), the questionnaires and the blood samples will allow researchers to better understand aging, with and without a neurodegenerative condition, over a period of time. Participants will receive a personalized health and activity report, describing sleep and activity during the time the wearable sensors were worn. This information may help participants better understand and manage some aspects of their overall health and it can be shared with their circle of care.
Detailed description
HANDDS-ONT is designed with the following principal research question in mind: Can the integration of biosamples, clinical data and remote wearable biosensor data across aging and neurodegenerative disease cohorts i) provide valuable diagnostic data, ii) demonstrate predictive utility for important clinical outcomes and iii) guide daily decisions and care for individuals living with neurodegenerative diseases? Ultimately we aim to improve the lived-experience of individuals affected by dementia. This protocol focuses on building the foundation for this long-term objective by adapting the NIA-AA framework to link genetic, proteomic, and free-living behavioural signatures across NDD cohorts. Objectives: Objective 1 will examine the expression of single proteins or sets of proteins (i.e., protein biomarkers), and different gene mutation inheritance patterns (e.g. mutation negative, monogenic mutation, polygenic mutations), to help identify unique cohorts with similar symptoms and free-living behavioural profiles. Objective 2 will examine the relationship between multidimensional data (genomic-proteomic signatures, functional behaviours extracted from free-living data collected with wearable biosensors), and the risk for adverse health outcomes (e.g., ED visits, hospitalizations, long-term care admission, death, comorbid disease). Objective 3 will examine the useability, acceptance and impact of feedback on self-management activities. Feedback around functional activities will be provided in the form of a participant report that conveys higher level metrics intended to inform and/or alter behavior relative to overall health, symptom management, and/or quality of life. HANDDS-ONT is designed as a "Master Observational Trial" \[https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cell.2019.12.009\], connecting real-world clinical data with cellular, protein marker and genetic data, free-living behavioural data measured by wearable biosensors and longer-term health outcome data via linkage to administrative datasets at ICES. Data collection will build on existing ONDRI research infrastructure and a central group of research cores that reflect the evolving state of research in neurodegenerative disorders. Specifically, there will be five complimentary research cores (Fluid biomarkers, Clinical, Wearable biosensors, Health Systems, and Neuroinformatics) overseen by a central research Administration Core. To achieve Objective 1, fluid biomarkers from serum and plasma, genetic data, clinical information and free-living behaviours (e.g. sleep, physical activity and other markers collected using wearable biosensors) will be integrated to identify groups based on NIA-AA research framework. Participants will be asked to provide a blood sample, complete standardized questionnaires for data collection by telephone or online, and wear wearable biosensors for 7-10 days described in sections below. To achieve Objective 2, the clinico-pathological cohorts identified in objective 1 (combining protein and genetic biomarker data with clinical and free-living behaviour data) will be linked to administrative datasets at ICES to identify risk factors for important clinical outcomes (e.g. death, long-term care need, comorbid diseases, falls) and patterns of health systems utilization. Participants will be asked for permission to securely store Health Card Numbers and link to ICES for outcomes (see Procedures and Assessments section, below). To achieve Objective 3, surveys and interviews will be administered. As additional metrics are validated, they will be integrated into the feedback form for evaluation using the methods described in Objective 3, above. Participants may consent to being recontacted for ongoing feedback and new study options (see Procedures and Assessments section, below).
Conditions
Timeline
- Start date
- 2021-08-26
- Primary completion
- 2023-03-31
- Completion
- 2023-03-31
- First posted
- 2021-09-30
- Last updated
- 2024-04-02
Locations
1 site across 1 country: Canada
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05062512. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.