Department of Neonatology, North Hospital, APHM University Hospital, Marseille, France.
CEReSS - Health Service Research and Quality of Life Center, Faculty of Medicine, Aix-Marseille University, 27 Bd Jean Moulin, 13385, Marseille, cedex 05, France.
BMC Pediatr. 2021 Sep 13;21(1):402. doi: 10.1186/s12887-021-02867-x.
Very preterm children generally perform poorly in executive functions and particularly in working memory. Adaptive training tasks encouraging these children to work continuously on their personal working memory capacity can be very useful. Above all in preschool-age children, several cognitive training programs focused on improving working memory capacity. Cogmed is a computerized visuospatial cognitive training program that improves working memory in children and adolescents with attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder. The main objective is to assess the long-term effects (18 months) of cognitive training (Cogmed) on visuospatial processing in preschool-age very preterm children with working memory impairment.
The EPIREMED study is a prospective, randomized, controlled, multicentric trial nested in a population based epidemiological survey. An intervention group (Cogmed cognitive training) and a control group (standard care management) will compare children aged 5½ to 6 years, born between 24- and 34-weeks' gestational age, with a global intelligence quotient > 70 and a working memory index < 85. The study will include 166 children from national study EPIPAGE-2 (Epidemiological Study on Small Gestational Ages). The intervention consists of 25 sessions administered over a 5- to 8-week period. The primary endpoint will be the visuospatial processing, assessed by the score of the visuospatial index: score of the WPPSI-IV (Wechsler Preschool and Primary Scale of Intelligence). The secondary endpoints will allow to assess the executive functions, language and abilities, infant behavior, quality of life assessment, school performance and parental anxiety.
This project's primary goal is to demonstrate the necessity of early visuospatial memory assessment within the vulnerable population of very preterm children, and to prove the feasibility and efficacy of computerized cognitive training using online software programs. A better global neuropsychological development improvement (visuospatial processing and other far transfer) can be expected with an improvement in learning and decreased behavioral problems. In the long term, these improvements might also reduce those global costs linked to the consequences of extreme prematurity.
NCT02757794 (registered on 2nd May 2016 at ClinicalTrial.gov).
极早产儿的执行功能通常较差,尤其是工作记忆。鼓励这些儿童持续提高个人工作记忆能力的适应性训练任务非常有用。尤其是在学龄前儿童中,有几个认知训练计划侧重于提高工作记忆能力。Cogmed 是一种计算机化的视空间认知训练程序,可提高患有注意力缺陷/多动障碍的儿童和青少年的工作记忆能力。主要目的是评估认知训练(Cogmed)对有工作记忆障碍的学龄前极早产儿的视空间处理的长期影响(18 个月)。
EPIREMED 研究是一项前瞻性、随机、对照、多中心试验,嵌套在基于人群的流行病学调查中。干预组(Cogmed 认知训练)和对照组(标准护理管理)将比较年龄在 5 岁半至 6 岁之间、出生于 24-34 周胎龄、全球智商>70 且工作记忆指数<85 的儿童。该研究将包括来自国家研究 EPIPAGE-2(小胎龄流行病学研究)的 166 名儿童。干预包括 25 个疗程,持续 5-8 周。主要终点将是视空间处理,通过视空间指数的分数来评估:WPPSI-IV(韦氏学前和小学智力量表)的分数。次要终点将评估执行功能、语言和能力、婴儿行为、生活质量评估、学校表现和父母焦虑。
该项目的主要目标是证明在极早产儿这一弱势群体中早期进行视空间记忆评估的必要性,并证明使用在线软件程序进行计算机化认知训练的可行性和有效性。通过改善学习和减少行为问题,可以预期更好的整体神经心理发育改善(视空间处理和其他远迁移)。从长远来看,这些改善也可能降低与极端早产相关的全球成本。
NCT02757794(于 2016 年 5 月 2 日在 ClinicalTrials.gov 注册)。