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Evaluation of the Effects of Serious Cognitive Games on a Digital Tactile Table for Elderly People with Alzheimer's Disease or Related Disorders

R

RIVAGES

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Alzheimer Disease or Associated Disorder

Treatments

Other: The system involves a digital table with a tactile and interactive surface, providing several play areas. It simulates a village and offers different types of serious cognitive games: semantic memory

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT06781645
2024-A02676-41

Details and patient eligibility

About

Alzheimer's disease and related disorders are chronic, progressive diseases that have a major impact on the lives of sufferers and their families. They lead to a decline in cognitive function and are associated with a loss of independence and quality of life for sufferers. The loss of autonomy associated with major cognitive disorders can lead to feelings of worthlessness and loss of self-esteem. People may feel sad, depressed and, above all, very anxious. When this anxiety is linked to relationships with others, it can become major social anxiety, which aggravates the negative feelings and contributes to the deleterious progression of the neurodegenerative disease. Feelings of low self-esteem and/or the anxiety that accompanies them cannot be treated solely by long-term psychotropic drugs, as these can worsen the disorders through iatrogenesis. In this context, non-drug approaches can be seen as an essential complement.

Cognition-based therapies, including cognitive stimulation, are based on a neuroeducational approach that can be deployed at different stages of the disease, either individually or in groups. Other patient-centred cognitive stimulation techniques have also been developed. In recent years, research has focused on serious digital games, which seem to combine rehabilitation possibilities in a playful form, making it easier for patients to adhere to them. They can also be used to work on motor skills, spatial reference, reflexes and speed and potentially improve verbal and non-verbal learning. Several recent meta-analyses have shown that brain games are an innovative and potentially effective approach to cognitive training for elderly people with cognitive disorders.

Based on the existing literature, experimenting with a serious digital cognitive game could potentially produce beneficial results by improving parameters such as self-esteem and anxiety in patients with early or moderate Alzheimer's disease or a related illness. As part of their weekly cognitive stimulation programme at the day hospital, they plan to use the interactive digital table 'Le Village' ©, which can be used to offer fun exercises on working memory, semantic memory, explicit memory and sensory memory, with game objectives focusing on reaction, reminiscence and dexterity. The digital table simulates a village, allowing 6 people to play simultaneously and interact. This digital table can be used for individual or group sessions.

Enrollment

46 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

65+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Person aged ≥ 65 years
  • A person with Alzheimer's disease or a related disorder established by a full medical diagnosis according to DSM-5 criteria, at a mild to moderate stage defined by a Mini-Mental State (MMSE) ≥ 15/30
  • A person who regularly attends the day hospital at Charles Foix Hospital Persons able to give their consent to take part in the study

Exclusion criteria

  • Person with severe neurocognitive disorders (MMSE < 15/30)
  • Person refusing to participate

Trial design

Primary purpose

Other

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

46 participants in 2 patient groups

programme A, with digital table
Experimental group
Treatment:
Other: The system involves a digital table with a tactile and interactive surface, providing several play areas. It simulates a village and offers different types of serious cognitive games: semantic memory
programme B, without digital table
No Intervention group

Trial contacts and locations

0

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Central trial contact

Joël Belmin, Professor; Sylvie Pariel, Doctor

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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