Status
Conditions
Treatments
About
Postoperative delirium is a significant public health concern, affecting up to 70% of elderly patients presenting for surgery. Furthermore, postoperative delirium is associated with increased mortality, persistent cognitive decline, increased hospital length of stay, and elevated healthcare costs. Unfortunately, there is a lack of evidence-based strategies that consistently and effectively reduce the risk of delirium. In fact, although the American Geriatrics Society has released guidelines for the prevention of postoperative delirium, the evidence supporting many of the proposed preventive measures has been deemed low quality.
Cognitive training exercises have been shown to improve cognitive function and functional status in community-dwelling elderly adults, and benefits may last for several months to years. Specifically, training exercises have led to improved performance in attention, short-term memory, and visuospatial processing; all of which are implicated as clinical features of delirium. Cognitive training has also strengthened connectivity in brain networks implicated in postoperative delirium. Thus, given these specific neurological benefits afforded, preoperative cognitive training may provide protection against the development of postoperative delirium. As such, the aim of this pilot study is to assess the feasibility of implementing a preoperative cognitive training program for surgical patients at high-risk for delirium and other associated complications.
Full description
This will be a single-center study conducted at the University of Michigan Health System. Participants will be prospectively enrolled and randomized to the interventional group (cognitive training) or control group (no training). Recruitment will take place at the University of Michigan Domino's Farms preoperative clinic at least seven days prior to scheduled, elective surgery. The recruitment goal will be 30 patients per group (total N=60) in this feasibility study. A computer-generated, stratified randomization schedule will be utilized.
This study will use an adaptive cognitive training battery that specifically targets attention, working memory, and visuospatial processing (BrainHQ, Posit Science Corporation, San Francisco, CA). These tests have been successfully used across diverse patient populations, demonstrating improvements in cognition and functional outcomes to varying degrees. The level of difficulty of each test is automatically adjusted depending on the participant's performance, with test difficulty increasing as user performance improves. Participants will access the training software platform via home internet connection, and our study team will be able to monitor training progress.
Delirium assessments will be performed using the Confusion Assessment Method, 3-minute diagnostic assessment (3D-CAM) or CAM-ICU as appropriate, and they will take place at baseline, in the postanesthesia recovery unit (PACU), and twice daily from postoperative day (POD) 1-3. The assessor performing the CAM interviews will be blinded to the intervention. Our team has completed formal training in CAM methodology through the NIH-funded (K07AG041835) Center of Excellence for Delirium in Aging: Research, Training, and Educational Enhancement (CEDARTREE) at Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital, Boston, MA.
Cognitive function will be briefly assessed throughout the study period using three tests from the NIH Toolbox Cognition Battery - Flanker Inhibitory Control and Attention Test, List Sorting Working Memory Test, and the Pattern Comparison Processing Speed Test. Collectively, these tests assess executive function, attention, working memory, and processing speed, which are cognitive domains affected by delirium as described above. These tests have been validated in adults up to the age of 85, and they will be administered, via calibrated iPad, to participants at baseline, the morning of surgery, and at the conclusion of the POD3 visit. The purpose of this testing will be to assess for sustained, transferred, cognitive gains afforded by training in the intervention group.
Delirium is a grave public health concern, particularly for surgical patients. Cognitive training has shown promise with improving clinical and neurophysiological traits associated with delirium, though this potential efficacy has not been tested in a preventive manner in vulnerable surgical patients. Cognitive prehabilitation, via targeted cognitive training exercises, may serve as feasible strategy for reducing the risk of delirium its and associated morbidity and mortality.
Enrollment
Sex
Ages
Volunteers
Inclusion criteria
Exclusion criteria
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
61 participants in 2 patient groups
Loading...
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
Clinical trials
Research sites
Resources
Legal