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Dyadic, App-supported Collaborative Care Intervention Trial for Family Caregivers of People Living With Dementia (Living@Home)

G

German Center for Neurodegenerative Diseases (DZNE)

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Informal Caregiver
Nurse Care Coordination
Dementia

Treatments

Other: Experimental arm

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT07251088
01NVF24315

Details and patient eligibility

About

In Germany, approximately 1.8 million individuals are living with dementia, representing a considerable share of those requiring long-term care. Many people with dementia (PlwD) express the desire to remain in their home environment for as long as possible. However, the progressive cognitive and physical decline associated with the disease renders caregiving increasingly time-intensive and places a substantial burden on family members. In the absence of sufficient support structures, maintaining home-based care becomes difficult, creating additional strain on the health care system.

The study aims to address these challenges through an innovative intervention. Its primary objectives are: (1) to evaluate whether a dyadic care management model, delivered by specialized nurses with expertise in dementia care and supported by a mobile health application that provides direct access to caregiving experts and memory clinics, can help stabilize the home care situation; (2) to determine whether this approach reduces caregiver burden; and (3) to assess its effectiveness in alleviating neuropsychiatric symptoms in PlwD, compared to usual care.

Full description

In Germany, approximately 84% of the five million individuals in need of care are supported at home by informal caregivers, most commonly family members. Only 21% receive professional assistance from care or support services, highlighting the substantial responsibility placed on families. People living with dementia (PlwD) constitute a particularly large share of these care recipients. On average, they require around 36 hours of informal care per week-considerably more than individuals affected by conditions such as cancer (16 hours/week) or stroke (24 hours/week).

Both PlwD and their caregivers, often conceptualized as a dyad, frequently express a strong preference for remaining in their home environment and sustaining home-based care for as long as possible. While many caregivers provide support over extended periods and may even perceive their role as meaningful, the progressive cognitive and physical decline of PlwD, combined with neuropsychiatric symptoms and caregivers' perceived sense of obligation, can result in considerable psychological and physical strain. Such strain is commonly associated with depression, anxiety, diminished subjective well-being, reduced self-efficacy, and social withdrawal. Consequently, the sustainability of home care is often precarious. Indeed, 40% of caregivers of community-dwelling PlwD report being unable to maintain care for longer than one year, leading to institutionalization.

Although support services for caregivers have been steadily expanded in recent years, their utilization remains limited. Barriers include a lack of awareness, organizational hurdles, and, paradoxically, the high demands of caregiving itself, which can hinder access to such services. In the absence of sufficient support, informal care is increasingly substituted by professional long-term care, thereby intensifying pressure on already limited workforce and financial resources within the health care system. This transition is also frequently accompanied by feelings of guilt among caregivers.

Evidence regarding the effectiveness of interventions to support caregivers is mixed. Randomized controlled trials have only partly demonstrated significant reductions in caregiver burden. A meta-analysis indicated that individualized, structured multicomponent interventions-comprising various support modules-are most effective. While there is some evidence for cost-effectiveness, it is constrained by small sample sizes. A model-based analysis suggests that dyadic interventions, which target both PlwD and caregivers, may prolong the feasibility of home-based care and could be cost-effective. However, findings remain inconsistent: a meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials reported positive outcomes in 13 studies but no effect in 9 others. Effectiveness appears to depend strongly on the duration and intensity of interventions. One explanation may be that caregiver needs during periods of heightened burden were not adequately or promptly addressed.

Digital health interventions, such as remote, app-based solutions, offer the potential to overcome these limitations by providing flexible and immediate support at critical moments. Nevertheless, research in this field remains limited, and it is still unclear to what extent digital approaches can stabilize home care situations for PlwD and their families.

Enrollment

554 estimated patients

Sex

All

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • formal dementia diagnosis
  • living in their own home for the person with dementia
  • access to a smartphone and internet for the informal caregiver
  • informed consent of the participant

Exclusion criteria

  • not able to provide written consent
  • if a legal representative is present, they may give their consent

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

554 participants in 2 patient groups

Care as usual
No Intervention group
Description:
Care as usual
Individualized Dementia Care Management
Experimental group
Description:
Dyads in the intervention group will receive individualized dementia care management over a twelve-month period, with the objective of identifying and effectively addressing the unmet needs of people living with dementia (PlwD) and their caregivers. The intervention is complemented by a mobile health application used by both caregivers and Care Specialists, providing caregivers with continuous access to care managers and memory clinics whenever challenges or burdens arise. The app facilitates ongoing monitoring of caregivers' health status and burden through regular realtime data collection, aggregation, and transmission to the care manager, thereby enabling timely and needs-based interventions or re-interventions. Consequently, the frequency and intensity of the intervention are tailored to the dyads' individual circumstances and reported levels of burden.
Treatment:
Other: Experimental arm

Trial contacts and locations

12

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Central trial contact

Eva Gläser; Bernhard Michalowsky, PD Dr. Dr.

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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