Yesantharao Lekha V, Rosenberg Paul, Oh Esther, Leoutsakos Jeannie, Munro Cynthia A, Agrawal Yuri
Department of Otolaryngology-Head and Neck Surgery, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, 21205, USA.
Pilot Feasibility Stud. 2022 Aug 2;8(1):167. doi: 10.1186/s40814-022-01133-w.
Falls are highly common in patients with Alzheimer's disease (AD); around two-thirds of AD patients fall annually. Fall events are major drivers of injury, early institutionalization, and shorter survival. Balance and mobility impairment are among the most important fall risk factors in AD patients. Vestibular therapy (VT) is an effective rehabilitation intervention in improving balance and fall risk through vestibular function, but not often used in AD. We want to evaluate the feasibility of using VT to reduce falls and improve balance function in patients with AD and drive use of an existing, potentially beneficial therapy in a patient population whose high level of vestibular deficits is currently unaddressed.
The proposed pilot clinical trial will be a parallel-group randomized controlled trial. Patients with a diagnosis of mild-moderate AD, age ≥ 60, and the presence of a caregiver will be recruited from the Johns Hopkins Memory and Alzheimer's Treatment Center. Eligible patients will be offered vestibular testing. Patients with vestibular loss will be offered participation in the VT trial. One-hundred AD patients with vestibular loss will be enrolled and randomized 1:1 into the control and intervention arms of the trial. All patients will undergo baseline balance and cognitive assessment, followed by 8 weeks of active control therapy or VT, consisting of ~25-min office sessions with a vestibular therapist. Patients will be tracked for falls and undergo follow-up balance and cognitive assessment at 8 and 52 weeks (1 year) to assess the potential short-term and longer-term effects, respectively, of VT on balance and cognition. The main outcomes of this trial are falls, balance (using the Berg Balance Scale and the Timed Up and Go test), and cognition (using the clock drawing test, the Card Rotations test, the Money Road Map test, and the triangle completion task).
As the population ages and the number of individuals with AD in the US grows to a projected 14 million in 2050, managing falls in AD will continue to grow as a critical public health concern; this trial assesses feasibility of a potential solution.
ClinicalTrial.Gov identifier - NCT03799991 . Registered 01 August 2019.
跌倒在阿尔茨海默病(AD)患者中极为常见;约三分之二的AD患者每年都会跌倒。跌倒事件是导致受伤、过早入住养老院以及缩短生存期的主要原因。平衡和行动能力受损是AD患者最重要的跌倒风险因素之一。前庭治疗(VT)是一种通过前庭功能改善平衡和降低跌倒风险的有效康复干预措施,但在AD患者中并不常用。我们希望评估使用VT减少AD患者跌倒并改善平衡功能的可行性,并推动在目前前庭功能严重受损的患者群体中使用一种现有的、可能有益的治疗方法。
拟进行的试点临床试验将是一项平行组随机对照试验。将从约翰霍普金斯记忆与阿尔茨海默病治疗中心招募诊断为轻度至中度AD、年龄≥60岁且有照料者的患者。符合条件的患者将接受前庭测试。有前庭功能丧失的患者将被邀请参加VT试验。100名有前庭功能丧失的AD患者将被纳入并按1:1随机分为试验的对照组和干预组。所有患者将接受基线平衡和认知评估,随后进行8周的积极对照治疗或VT,包括与前庭治疗师进行约25分钟的门诊治疗。将对患者的跌倒情况进行跟踪,并在8周和52周(1年)时进行随访平衡和认知评估,以分别评估VT对平衡和认知的潜在短期和长期影响。该试验的主要结局指标为跌倒、平衡(使用伯格平衡量表和定时起立行走测试)和认知(使用画钟试验、卡片旋转试验、金钱路线图试验和三角形完成任务)。
随着人口老龄化以及美国AD患者数量预计到2050年将增至1400万,管理AD患者的跌倒问题将继续成为一个关键的公共卫生问题;该试验评估了一种潜在解决方案的可行性。
ClinicalTrial.Gov标识符 - NCT03799991。于2019年8月1日注册。