Center for Neuroscience and Behavioral Medicine, Neuropsychology Division, Children's National Medical Center, Washington, DC 20010, USA.
Psychooncology. 2013 Aug;22(8):1856-65. doi: 10.1002/pon.3222. Epub 2012 Dec 2.
Survivors of pediatric brain tumors and acute lymphoblastic leukemia (ALL) are at increased risk for neurocognitive deficits, but few empirically supported treatment options exist. We examined the feasibility and preliminary efficacy of a home-based, computerized working memory training program, CogmedRM, with survivors of childhood cancer.
Survivors of brain tumors or ALL (n = 20) with identified deficits in attention and/or working memory were randomized to either the success-adapted computer intervention or a non-adaptive, active control condition. Specifically, children in the adaptive condition completed exercises that became more challenging with each correct trial, whereas those in the non-adaptive version trained with exercises that never increased in difficulty. All participants were asked to complete 25 training sessions at home, with weekly, phone-based coaching support. Brief assessments were completed pre-intervention and post-intervention; outcome measures included both performance-based and parent-report measures of working memory and attention.
Eighty-five percent of survivors were compliant with the intervention, with no adverse events reported. After controlling for baseline intellectual functioning, survivors who completed the intervention program evidenced significant post-training improvements in their visual working memory and in parent-rated learning problems compared with those in the active control group. No differences in verbal working memory functioning were evident between groups, however.
Home-based, computerized cognitive training demonstrates good feasibility and acceptability in our sample. Children with higher intellectual functioning at baseline appeared to benefit more from the training, although further study is needed to clarify the strength, scope, and particularly the generalizability of potential treatment effects.
患有脑部肿瘤和急性淋巴细胞白血病(ALL)的儿童幸存者存在神经认知缺陷的风险增加,但目前几乎没有经过实证支持的治疗选择。我们研究了一种基于家庭的计算机化工作记忆训练计划 CogmedRM 在儿童癌症幸存者中的可行性和初步疗效。
患有脑部肿瘤或 ALL 的幸存者(n = 20)存在注意力和/或工作记忆缺陷,随机分配到成功适应型计算机干预组或非适应型主动对照组。具体来说,适应性组的儿童完成的练习随着每次正确试验而变得更具挑战性,而在非适应性版本中,儿童则进行从未增加难度的练习。所有参与者都被要求在家中完成 25 次训练课程,并每周通过电话进行辅导支持。在干预前和干预后进行简短评估;结果测量包括工作记忆和注意力的基于表现和家长报告的测量。
85%的幸存者遵守了干预计划,没有报告不良事件。在控制基线智力功能后,与主动对照组相比,完成干预计划的幸存者在视觉工作记忆和家长评定的学习问题方面表现出显著的训练后改善。然而,两组在言语工作记忆功能方面没有差异。
基于家庭的计算机化认知训练在我们的样本中表现出良好的可行性和可接受性。基线智力功能较高的儿童似乎从训练中受益更多,但需要进一步研究来澄清潜在治疗效果的强度、范围,特别是普遍性。