Department of Epidemiology & Population Health, Albert Einstein College of Medicine, Belfer Building 1312C, Bronx, NY 10461 USA.
Biostatistics Unit, Kaiser Permanente Washington Health Research Institute, 1730 Minor Avenue, Suite 1600, Seattle, WA 98101, USA.
Contemp Clin Trials. 2023 Jan;124:107006. doi: 10.1016/j.cct.2022.107006. Epub 2022 Nov 14.
Emerging evidence indicates that healthy dietary patterns are associated with higher cognitive status; however, few clinical trials have explored this association in diverse middle-aged adults before the onset of cognitive decline. We use novel ambulatory methods to assess cognition in natural settings in tandem with diet recording.
We investigate whether the Multicultural Healthy Diet Study to Reduce Cognitive Decline & Alzheimer's Disease Risk, a pilot randomized controlled trial of an anti-inflammatory dietary pattern compared to usual diet, can mitigate cognitive decline and Alzheimer's Disease risk in a diverse population of 40-65 year old adults in Bronx, New York.
Primary cognitive outcomes assessed at nine months are collected in an ecological momentary assessment "measurement burst" design, over the course of participants' daily lives. These ultra-brief, ambulatory cognitive assessments examine processing speed, visuospatial working memory, short-term associative memory binding, long-term associative memory, and working memory capacity. Key secondary outcomes relate to comparing dietary intake between study arms with respect to cognitive outcomes. We assess diet with food records using the National Cancer Institute's Automated Self-Administered 24-h record and serum biomarkers. We further investigate the association of self-reported diet and dietary biomarkers with inflammatory-based biomarkers.
This randomized controlled trial of diet and cognition for the first time combines novel measures of ambulatory cognitive assessment with web-based assessment of dietary intake recording. This new approach enabled the study to continue in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic in remote format.
新出现的证据表明,健康的饮食模式与更高的认知状态有关;然而,在认知能力下降之前,很少有临床试验在不同的中年人群中探索这种关联。我们使用新的动态方法在自然环境中评估认知能力,并与饮食记录相结合。
我们研究了多文化健康饮食研究以减少认知能力下降和阿尔茨海默病风险,这是一项针对抗炎饮食模式与常规饮食的先导随机对照试验,是否可以减轻纽约布朗克斯区 40-65 岁不同人群的认知能力下降和阿尔茨海默病风险。
主要认知结果在九个月时进行评估,采用生态瞬间评估“测量爆发”设计,在参与者日常生活中进行。这些超短的动态认知评估检查处理速度、视空间工作记忆、短期联想记忆绑定、长期联想记忆和工作记忆容量。关键次要结果涉及比较研究臂之间的饮食摄入与认知结果的关系。我们使用国家癌症研究所的自动自我管理 24 小时记录和血清生物标志物来评估食物记录中的饮食。我们进一步研究了自我报告的饮食和饮食生物标志物与基于炎症的生物标志物的关联。
这项关于饮食和认知的随机对照试验首次将动态认知评估的新方法与基于网络的饮食摄入记录评估相结合。这种新方法使该研究能够在 COVID-19 大流行期间以远程方式继续进行。