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Primary Care Detection of Cognitive Impairment Leveraging Health & Consumer Technologies in Underserved Communities: The MyCog Trial

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Northwestern University

Status

Enrolling

Conditions

Alzheimer Disease
Cognitive Impairment
Cognitive Decline
Dementia

Treatments

Diagnostic Test: MyCog

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05607732
U01NS105562

Details and patient eligibility

About

Our study intends to offer 'real world' evidence of a viable, sustainable means to mobilize primary care via a comprehensive strategy for detecting cognitive impairment and dementias, advancing next steps for referral, and participating in the care planning and management of affected patients and caregivers. We will conduct a clinic-randomized, pragmatic trial testing the effectiveness and fidelity of our NIH Toolbox-derived paradigm to improve early detection and management of cognitive impairment/dementia in primary care settings serving health disparate patient populations.

Full description

Practical, scalable strategies are needed to help primary care practices better detect and manage cognitive impairment (CI), especially those caring for medically underserved, low socioeconomic status (SES) communities. Since 2017, our team has been a member of the Consortium for Detecting Cognitive Impairment, Including Dementia (DetectCID); a network dedicated to improving clinical paradigms for early detection of CI and Alzheimer's disease-related dementias (ADRD) and its subsequent management in everyday clinical settings. Having developed the NIH Toolbox for Assessment of Neurological and Behavioral Function and with expertise in health system re-design for patient-centered care, we validated our clinical paradigm, known as MyCog. This includes a brief, iPad-based, self-administered, electronic health record (EHR)-linked strategy to assess for CI during primary care visits when concerns are identified, and 'turnkey' recommendations to address them.

We will partner with a national primary care provider (Oak Street Health) and conduct a 2-arm, clinic-randomized, 'real world' pragmatic trial comparing MyCog to usual care. We will focus on populations experiencing CI/ADRD disparities: Black, H/L, and low SES older adults.

Our specific aims and hypotheses (H) are to:

Aim 1: Test the effectiveness of the MyCog paradigm to improve early detection of cognitive impairment and dementias among low SES, Black and Hispanic/Latino older adults.

Compared to usual care, primary care practices implementing MyCog will demonstrate:

H1: higher rates of detected and/or diagnosed cases of cognitive decline and impairment

Among detected and/or diagnosed cases of cognitive impairment, primary care practices implementing MyCog - compared to usual care - will have:

H2: a greater proportion of early stage (mild) cognitive impairments H3: more referrals for related medical and non-medical services H4: greater caregiver involvement in subsequent patient visits

Aim 2: Investigate the presence of disparities in early detection of cognitive impairment, its diagnosis, and rate of referrals by race and ethnicity.

H5: Disparities in early detection of CI, diagnosis, and referrals by race and ethnicity will be reduced among those primary care practices implementing MyCog compared to usual care.

Aim 3: Determine the fidelity and reliability of MyCog and identify any patient, caregiver, clinician, and/or health system barriers to its optimal, sustained implementation.

Aim 4: Assess the cost-effectiveness of the MyCog paradigm from a primary care perspective.

Enrollment

45,257 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

45+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • been seen by an Oak Street healthcare provider affiliated with one of the 24 enrolled practices
  • had at least one clinic visit (routine or Annual Wellness Visit) during the 3-year study period
  • not been diagnosed previously with cognitive deficits, impairments or dementias.

Exclusion criteria

  • Children, adolescence, and younger adults are excluded as cognitive impairment in these populations is often due to differences other than age-related changes.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

Double Blind

45,257 participants in 2 patient groups

MyCog Paradigm
Experimental group
Description:
The MyCog paradigm establishes a protocol for implementing our self-administered assessment in the clinic whenever a patient or involved family member reports a concern. The MyCog test can be completed either in the exam room or the waiting room. The MyCog app, on an iPad, can be readily linked to the electronic health record, so once the two tests are completed, results are securely transmitted and will populate within discrete, fields that can be queried found in the patient record; specifically: 1) in a screening tab, under 'cognitive abilities', 2) a flow sheet to capture trend with future repeated tests - informing physicians of a patient's relative vs. normative cognitive decline. Both a binary, objective classification of 'impairment detected or suspected' or 'no impairment detected' will populate in the record, as well as a summary score to further guide the clinician by clarifying the extent to which a patient's performance falls outside a normal threshold.
Treatment:
Diagnostic Test: MyCog
Usual Care Arm
No Intervention group
Description:
At Oak Street Health, cognitive assessments included when concerns are reported by patients or family members, if a clinician suspects a concern, or during Annual Wellness Visits (AWVs) are limited to the Mini-Cog©, and are variably administered, particularly outside of AWVs. Oak Street practices vary by clinician in terms of making referrals, how results are documented, what diagnosis code, placement in problem list or visit diagnosis, and any follow-up plans. While we will not make any explicit recommendations to usual care practices regarding their use of a cognitive assessment, we will ensure that 1) any chosen test is linked to a data field that can be queried in the EHR, and 2) providers receive a compiled list of local medical and non-medical referrals for any detected cases of CI. The Alzheimer's Association recommendations for early detection efforts among primary care practices will be provided to each clinical leadership.

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Morgan R Bonham, BS; Michael S Wolf, PhD MPH

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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