Centre for Health Services Research in Medicine, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, Universitätsklinikum Erlangen, Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg (FAU), Schwabachanlage 6, 91054, Erlangen, Germany.
Trials. 2022 May 5;23(1):371. doi: 10.1186/s13063-022-06152-9.
People with mild cognitive impairment (MCI) are at increased risk of converting to dementia. Cognitive training can improve the cognitive abilities of people with MCI. Computerised cognitive training (CCT) offers several advantages over traditional paper-and-pencil cognitive training and has the potential to be more individualised by matching task difficulty with individual performance. Recent systematic reviews have reported promising effects of CCT on improving the cognitive capacities of people with MCI. However, the quality of existing studies has been limited, and it is still unclear whether CCT can influence the progression to dementia. We developed an 'individualised' CCT (MAKSCog) specialised for people with MCI that automatically matches task difficulty with individual performance and an active control training ('basic' CCT). The aims of the present study are (a) to evaluate MAKSCog and (b) to investigate whether it can be applied to maintain the cognitive abilities of people with MCI.
The present study investigates the effects of CCT on cognition in a randomised controlled intervention study in Germany. Participants are community-dwelling people with a psychometric diagnosis of MCI based on the Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) and Mini-Mental Status Test (MMSE). Screening and baseline testing are conducted via a videoconferencing assessment and telephone. Participants are randomly allocated. The treatment phase is 6 months with an open phase in which participants can freely decide to continue to use the CCTs. Additionally, both CCTs contain a monthly computerised cognitive assessment that measures different cognitive abilities: information processing speed, memory span, short term memory, and logical reasoning.
This is the first study to investigate the effect of MAKSCog, an individualised CCT, specifically developed for people with different subtypes of MCI. A methodological strength is the double-blind, randomised, controlled design and the use of basic CCT as an active control group. The study is conducted entirely virtually with valid telehealth assessments for cognitive function. Methodological limitations might include a restriction to participants who feel comfortable with the use of technology and who own a computer, laptop, or tablet.
ISRCTN ISRCTN14437015 . Prospectively registered on 27 February 2020.
轻度认知障碍(MCI)患者认知能力下降的风险增加。认知训练可以提高 MCI 患者的认知能力。计算机认知训练(CCT)比传统的纸笔认知训练具有多项优势,并且通过将任务难度与个体表现相匹配,具有更大的个体化潜力。最近的系统评价报告了 CCT 改善 MCI 患者认知能力的可喜效果。然而,现有研究的质量有限,目前仍不清楚 CCT 是否会影响向痴呆的发展。我们开发了一种专门针对 MCI 患者的“个体化” CCT(MAKSCog),该 CCT 可自动将任务难度与个体表现相匹配,还有一种主动控制训练(“基础” CCT)。本研究的目的是(a)评估 MAKSCog,以及(b)研究其是否可以用于维持 MCI 患者的认知能力。
本研究在德国一项随机对照干预研究中调查了 CCT 对认知的影响。参与者是根据蒙特利尔认知评估(MoCA)和简易精神状态检查(MMSE)进行的心理计量学诊断为 MCI 的社区居住者。通过视频会议评估和电话进行筛选和基线测试。参与者被随机分配。治疗阶段为 6 个月,开放阶段参与者可以自由决定继续使用 CCT。此外,两种 CCT 都包含每月一次的计算机认知评估,评估不同的认知能力:信息处理速度、记忆广度、短期记忆和逻辑推理。
这是第一项研究 MAKSCog 效果的研究,MAKSCog 是一种专门针对不同亚型 MCI 患者开发的个体化 CCT。本研究的一个方法学优势是采用了双盲、随机、对照设计,并使用了基础 CCT 作为活性对照组。该研究完全是虚拟进行的,对认知功能的远程健康评估是有效的。方法学限制可能包括仅限制对使用技术感到舒适且拥有计算机、笔记本电脑或平板电脑的参与者进行研究。
ISRCTN ISRCTN81135161。于 2020 年 2 月 27 日进行前瞻性注册。