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Cognitive Screening Made Easy for PCPs - Administrative Supplement

The University of Texas System (UT) logo

The University of Texas System (UT)

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Cognitive Impairment
Dementia, Mild
Cognitive Decline

Treatments

Behavioral: RACS app

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06928298
AG069780-04S

Details and patient eligibility

About

This project will facilitate early detection of cognitive decline in older adults through development and implementation of an automated risk assessment and cognitive screening tool for use in primary care. By providing an automated tool developed specifically to address the needs of PCPs, it will be easier to screen for cognitive impairment, increasing the number of older adults who are screened and thus identified and treated.

Full description

In the United States and around the world, people are living longer lives. As the population ages, so does the number of older adults who may experience declines in memory, attention, reasoning, or other thinking skills. Some of these changes in cognition can be treated and reversed if caught early. Others can be slowed down and hopefully one day prevented. Unfortunately, people with cognitive decline or very mild dementia often are not recognized until late in the disease course when treatments are less effective. As the first health care professional most people reach out to about medical concerns, primary care providers play a critical role in detecting cognitive decline early. While many primary care providers conduct cognitive screening at Medicare Annual Wellness Visits and when patients voice concerns, 9 out of 10 would like more information about who to screen, which assessment tool to use, and what to say if screening is positive. Deciding who to screen with a brief cognitive assessment tool is a key part of the process because not everyone needs to be screened, and primary care providers already face time pressures to address the obvious and immediate concerns of their patients. The long-term goal of this project is to develop a risk assessment and cognitive screening tool that requires minimal time and effort from primary care providers or their staff and is sensitive to cognitive decline in older adults from diverse educational and racial/ethnic backgrounds. The tool will be integrated into electronic health record systems to make it easy for primary care providers and patients to see results. The specific aims for the administrative supplement of the R33 phase of this project are to further test the effectiveness of the newly developed risk assessment and cognitive screening application in 100 Spanish speaking older adults receiving care in primary care clinics, to find out from primary care providers using the tool how much they liked it and if it was useful and easy to use, and to integrate findings into multiple electronic health record systems. Findings from this project will fill a gap in the existing toolkit of primary care providers and will make screening for cognitive decline quick, easy, effective and accessible in more than one language.

Enrollment

100 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

60+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Inclusion Criteria:
  • Aged 60 years and older;
  • Ethnic/racial background consistent with NIH policy
  • Male or female
  • Fluent in Spanish.

Exclusion criteria

  • Confounding conditions that could impact ability to participate in the study (e.g., cognitive impairment sufficient to impact ability to follow instructions on the iPad, motor impairment that would prohibit independent use of RACS, poor visual acuity)
  • Prior diagnosis of dementia
  • Non-Spanish speaking.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Screening

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

100 participants in 1 patient group

Intervention
Other group
Description:
Risk assessment and cognitive screening app that includes questions answered by the participant and completion of a working memory task and two speech tasks
Treatment:
Behavioral: RACS app

Trial contacts and locations

3

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Central trial contact

Joshua Chang, Md, PhD; Robin C Hilsabeck, PhD

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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