Hugenschmidt Christina E, Ip Edward H, Laurita-Spanglet Jessie, Babcock Phyllis, Morgan Ashley R, Fanning Jason T, King Kamryn, Thomas Jantira T, Soriano Christina T
Department of Internal Medicine, Section on Gerontology and Geriatric Medicine, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, USA.
Department of Biostatistics and Data Sciences, Wake Forest University School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, USA.
Contemp Clin Trials Commun. 2023 Jan 24;32:101073. doi: 10.1016/j.conctc.2023.101073. eCollection 2023 Apr.
In addition to cognitive impairment, people with Alzheimer's disease (PWAD) experience neuropsychiatric symptoms (e.g., apathy, depression), altered gait, and poor balance that further diminish their quality of life (QoL). Here, we describe a unique, randomized, controlled trial to test the hypothesis that both movement and social engagement aspects of a group dance intervention alter the connectivity of key brain networks involved in motor and social-emotional functioning and lead to improved QoL in PWAD.
IMOVE (NCT03333837) was a single-center, randomized, controlled 2x2 factorial trial that assigned PWAD/caregiver dyads to one of 4 study conditions (Movement Group, Movement Alone, Social Group, or Usual Care control). The Movement Group participated in twice-weekly group improvisational dance (IMPROVment® Method) classes for 12 weeks. The Movement Alone intervention captured the same dance movement and auditory stimuli as the group class without social interaction, and the Social Group used improvisational party games to recapitulate the fun and playfulness of the Movement Group without the movement. The primary outcome was change in QoL among PWAD. Key secondary outcomes were functional brain network measures assessed using graph-theory analysis of resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging scans, as well as neuropsychiatric symptoms, gait, and balance.
A total of 111 dyads were randomized; 89 completed the study, despite interruption and modification of the protocol due to COVID-19 restrictions (see companion paper by Fanning et al.). The data are being analyzed and will be submitted for publication in 2023.
除认知障碍外,阿尔茨海默病患者(PWAD)还会出现神经精神症状(如冷漠、抑郁)、步态改变和平衡能力差等问题,这些会进一步降低他们的生活质量(QoL)。在此,我们描述了一项独特的随机对照试验,以检验以下假设:团体舞蹈干预的运动和社交参与方面会改变参与运动和社会情感功能的关键脑网络的连通性,并改善PWAD的生活质量。
IMOVE(NCT03333837)是一项单中心、随机对照的2×2析因试验,将PWAD/照顾者二元组分配到4种研究条件之一(运动组、单独运动组、社交组或常规护理对照组)。运动组每周参加两次团体即兴舞蹈(IMPROVment®方法)课程,为期12周。单独运动干预采用与团体课程相同的舞蹈动作和听觉刺激,但没有社交互动,社交组使用即兴派对游戏来重现运动组的乐趣和趣味性,但没有舞蹈动作。主要结局是PWAD生活质量的变化。关键的次要结局是使用静息态功能磁共振成像扫描的图论分析评估的功能性脑网络指标,以及神经精神症状、步态和平衡能力。
总共111个二元组被随机分组;尽管由于COVID-19限制对方案进行了中断和修改,但仍有89个完成了研究(见Fanning等人的配套论文)。数据正在分析中,将于2023年提交发表。