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Effects Of An 8-Weeks Mindfulness-based Intervention In Individuals With Subjective Cognitive Decline (SCD-WELL)

I

Institut National de la Santé Et de la Recherche Médicale, France

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cognitive Dysfunction

Treatments

Behavioral: Health education weekly courses for 8 weeks
Behavioral: Mindfulness weekly courses for 8 weeks

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

The European Commission Horizon 2020 programme has funded the SCD-WELL trial to investigate the efficacy of mindfulness-based training to reduce anxiety in individuals with Subjective Cognitive Decline (SCD), in comparison to an active comparison condition.

It is increasingly recognized that most neuropathological processes start years before the onset of clinical Alzheimer's disease (AD). Hence, there is a growing urgency to target individuals in the earliest stages for intervention when neurodegeneration is still limited. Individuals clinically judged to have SCD, defined by subjectively experienced cognitive decline but normal performance on cognitive tests, are at increased risk for future cognitive decline and AD. These individuals with SCD currently have no established treatment options. Symptoms of anxiety have high prevalence in this population, and evidence from recent longitudinal research links anxiety with significantly accelerated cognitive decline in at risk individuals. Effectively reducing anxiety in this population may therefore not only relieve participants from burdensome symptoms, but may also slow cognitive decline and delay or prevent the onset of AD.

The investigators chose to study the efficacy of a mindfulness-based intervention to reduce anxiety in this population because this type of intervention has been shown to reduce anxiety in a number of populations, including in older adults. Further, accumulating evidence indicates that intensive mindfulness training effectively down-regulates a number of other adverse psychological and biological risk factors for AD, such as stress, depression, insomnia, feelings of loneliness and social exclusion, and cardiovascular risk factors. These findings are relevant to AD because approximately a third of AD cases worldwide might be attributable to potentially modifiable risk factors. In spite of the increased use of mindfulness-based interventions to treat clinical symptoms, these trials often suffer from the lack of an adequate comparison condition and lack of follow up to know whether initial benefits are maintained.

Full description

SCD-WELL includes both an active comparison condition and a 16-week follow up assessment after the end of the intervention. SCD-WELL is a non-CTIMP European multicentre, observer-blinded, randomized, controlled, superiority trial with two parallel groups, which compares anxiety and additional behavioural and biological outcomes amongst people with SCD who receive mindfulness-based training and those who receive a health education comparison intervention. Outcomes will be measured at baseline, post-intervention and 16 weeks after the end of the intervention.

160 older-adult patients diagnosed with SCD will be recruited to the study from memory clinics at four sites in Europe: London, UK; Cologne, Germany; Barcelona, Spain; Lyon, France where they will have sought help due to concern about their memory. Participants will be recruited in two waves over a maximum two-year period and will be provided with a participant information sheet, and asked to consider their participation. Should they wish to participate, and after a signed and dated Informed Consent Form has been obtained, a unique participant identification (ID) will be assigned to the participant.

Behavioural assessments will take place at baseline, after the intervention, and 16 weeks after the end of the intervention. Because we believe that mindfulness-based training has the potential to affect a number of areas of life we will also look at changes in other areas of psycho-affective symptoms, social functioning, awareness, well being and quality of life, sleep quality, and cognition, after the intervention and 16 weeks after the end of the intervention. Validated neuropsychological tests and behavioural questionnaires were selected for their sensitivity to the domains listed above. These measures will be completed alone by the participant or in the presence of a psychometrist. Questionnaires will also be completed by partners at the three time points to coincide with assessments of participants.

Blood samples will be taken at the memory clinic by certified phlebotomists at baseline, after the intervention and during follow-up to measure genetic markers of risk for AD as well as proteomic markers of stress and AD that may be affected by this intervention. Information will also be collected about the medical care of the participant.

Trained facilitators will deliver both interventions. Both interventions follow a manual, are group-based, include at-home activities, and are 8 weeks in duration. Both interventions provide individuals with sustainable skills that remain beyond the intervention period.

Enrollment

168 patients

Sex

All

Ages

60+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Aged ≥ 60 years
  • Meet the research criteria proposed by the international SCD-I working group for studies in SCD
  • Performance within the normal range on standardised cognitive tests according to agreed study-specific standards to rule out mild cognitive impairment (MCI) and dementia
  • Either referred to the memory clinic by a physician or who are self-referrals because of memory concerns (assessed by a positive response to the question 'Are you worried about your memory?')
  • Ability to provide informed consent in accordance with International Conference on Harmonization of Good Clinical Practice (GCP/ICH) guidelines and local regulations
  • State that they are available for the trial duration

Exclusion criteria

  • Presence of a major neurological or psychiatric disorder (including generalised anxiety, major depressive disorder, or an addiction to alcohol or drugs) according to ICD-10 and/or DSM 5 criteria

  • Under legal guardianship or incapacitation

  • History of cerebral disease (vascular, degenerative, physical malformation, tumor, or head trauma with loss of consciousness for more than an hour) which interferes with the aims of the study protocol

  • Presence of a chronic disease or acute unstable illness (respiratory, cardiovascular, digestive, renal, metabolic, hematologic, endocrine or infectious) which interferes with the aims of the study protocol

  • Current or recent medication that may interfere with cognitive action (psychotropic, systemic corticosteroid, anti-Parkinson's, or analgesic drugs). The interfering nature of the different treatments will be at the discretion of the investigating doctor.

  • Have regularly or intensively practiced meditation or comparable practices (yoga, Qi Gong, Alexander technique)

    • more than one day per week for more than six months consecutively over the last 10 years,
    • intensively (internship or retreat > five consecutive days) over the past 10 years,
    • more than 25 days of retreats (cumulatively) prior to the last 10 years.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

168 participants in 2 patient groups

Mindfulness intervention
Experimental group
Description:
consists of eight weekly group-based sessions of 2 hours duration and an individual pre-class interview, in which the participants will be socialised to the treatment. The intervention will combine intensive training in mindfulness and compassion meditation and gentle yoga practices with psycho-educational components targeted at helping individuals to deal more effectively with emotional difficulties and stressors commonly encountered in old age. These will include addressing concerns about cognitive functioning and health, and will have a particular emphasis on cultivating wholesome attitudes towards self and others.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Mindfulness weekly courses for 8 weeks
Health education intervention
Active Comparator group
Description:
follow the same format and structure as the mindfulness-based intervention, and will be matched to the mindfulness-based intervention in administration, dosage, and duration. The treatment is based on a published manual, with every session of the program covering different subjects, including self-management, problem-solving, sleep, stress, exercise, managing medicines and memory, communicating with family, friends, and healthcare professionals, eating, weight management, and planning for the future. Participants will be provided with information about these subjects and engage in group exercises and discussions about these subjects. They will be given a workbook and asked to actively engage in activities described in by the workbook to improve health and well-being on 6 out of 7 days each week, matching home assignments in the mindfulness-based intervention.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Health education weekly courses for 8 weeks

Trial contacts and locations

4

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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