Clinical Trials Directory

Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05729906

Dynamic Predictions of the Links Between Psychological and Physical Health of Older Patients in Nursing Home

Dynamic Predictions of the Links Between Psychological and Physical Health of Older Patients in Nursing Home Via the Integration of "Multi-omics" Data.

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
100 (actual)
Sponsor
University Hospital, Tours · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
65 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Taking the older person as a whole is now essential to age well and prevent loss of functional independence. However, the relationship between physical and mental health remains not well understood. Combining the exploration of markers of inflammation, endocrine, nutritional, and metabolic functions, along with long-term monitoring of older persons, could allow for a comprehensive understanding of the biological phenotype, regardless of underlying pathologies. The primary objective will be to simultaneously test the psychosomatic model and the disability model in order to more fully account for the dynamic causal relationships between physical and mental health in older people. The investigators will investigate the mediating role of the biological phenotype on these relationships between mental and physical health. The independent and then combined analysis of specific candidate biomarkers will open up the possibility of identifying a biological mediation between mental and physical health. Furthermore, this will also allow us to deepen our understanding of the evolution of the immune-endocrine-metabolic state and, more broadly, of the biological phenotype of older people during aging.

Detailed description

Promoting the health of older people to better support them remains one of the major challenges of the 21st century. More and more experts in gerontology (doctors, psychologists, sociologists, ...) are now advocating a holistic approach to older people. The recent recommendations of the WHO (2016) also invite us to favor an approach to aging centered on the potentialities and resources of older people more than on their deficiencies and diseases. Thus, taking into account the older person in his or her entirety ("body and mind") is a must for aging well and preventing the loss of functional independence. However, the relationship between physical and mental health remains poorly understood. The psychosomatic model postulates that well-being and positive affects have an impact on physical health. It has thus been shown that good psychological health (e.g., positive mood, hope, optimism) has long-term beneficial effects on longevity, cardiovascular health, and chronic diseases. Conversely, poor mental health (e.g., presence of depressive symptoms) affects the health of older subjects and increases mortality risk. These results are in line with the so-called top-down approaches which postulate that well-being is a psychological trait that is the cause of future personal evaluations. In this psychosomatic approach, well-being, positive affect (i.e., good psychological health), is seen as antecedent to physical health. Naturally, it would seem unlikely that well-being would predict improved health for older people. However, well-being or the presence of positive affect could well predict different trajectories of "health" in ill older people. In contrast, the so-called disability model postulates that physical health problems have an impact on psychological health, including well-being. This bottom-up approach considers physical health problems as antecedents of well-being. A study conducted by members of the laboratory supporting this project argues for this approach. The results show that poor physical health would unidirectionally predict poor life satisfaction over the long term.However, no study to date has been able to confirm the prevalence of one model over the other. The main hypothesis of this research is based on the presence of a bi-directional pattern between physical and psychological health, and thus on the absence of a unique prevalence of one pattern over the other for the entire target elderly population. The investigators also hypothesize that the causal links between physical and psychological health may vary over time as a function of specific mediators, including inflammatory and metabolomic profiles. Our second hypothesis thus postulates that biological profiles could mediate the bi-directional links between physical and psychological health. For example, the investigators know that negative psychological affects have a negative impact on our "physical" health, so the investigators can assume that positive psychological affects can produce an anti-inflammatory effect, thus allowing us to be in better physical health (protective factor).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERpsychological and physical testsOnce included (T0), participants will be reviewed at 6 (T1), and 12 (T2) months. At the three measurement times, research professionals (belonging to the PAVeA laboratory) will carry out, within the nursing home the physical and psychological measurements (classic standardized tests for the population). These measurements will be carried out in parallel with the routine biological explorations performed in the institution. At each visit, the remaining blood sampled in routine will be frozen in 2 aliquots for metabolomic and spectrometric analyses at the end of the study by the iBrain and Research Center for Respiratory Diseases laboratories.

Timeline

Start date
2023-03-28
Primary completion
2023-09-28
Completion
2024-07-19
First posted
2023-02-15
Last updated
2024-12-05

Locations

5 sites across 1 country: France

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05729906. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.