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Prospective Monocentric Study of Taste in Patients With Minor or Major Cognitive Disorders Such as Alzheimer's, Through the Analysis of Gustatory Evoked Potentials. (MAPEG)

U

University Hospital Center (CHU) Dijon Bourgogne

Status

Completed

Conditions

Cognitive Disorders

Treatments

Other: Subjective taste tests
Biological: Blood sampling
Other: Objective taste tests
Other: Cognitive Assessment

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT04860414
JACQUIN 2020

Details and patient eligibility

About

Approximately 24 million people worldwide suffer from dementia, with Alzheimer's disease being the most common cause. Alzheimer's disease typically progresses in three stages: presymptomatic, prodromal ("early onset" or minor cognitive impairment) and major cognitive impairment with loss of autonomy and significant psycho-behavioral symptoms. Efforts to counteract its expansion are increasing, and there is a need for biomarkers to identify the disease in its earliest stage in order to provide prompt treatment.

Faced with a episodic memory disorder, it is possible, thanks to certain criteria, highlighted by neuroimaging, or by biomarkers obtained by biological analysis of cerebrospinal fluid (during a lumbar puncture), to detect Alzheimer's disease from the prodromal stage, or even earlier. The main limitation of these criteria is their invasive nature. Other non-invasive biomarkers would therefore be useful to help diagnose Alzheimer's disease at an early stage. Gustatory evoked potentials (GEP), a technique for exploring taste sensory pathways, could meet these needs.

Indeed, GEPs are a method of exploring the gustatory sensory pathway based on the recording of cerebral electrical activity by electroencephalography (EEG). It is a painless, accessible, inexpensive and non-invasive technique. The alteration of gustatory functions is present in many neurological conditions, but often takes second place to sensory or motor symptoms. Rare studies have studied taste in patients with Alzheimer's disease, but they have demonstrated, using subjective tests only, an early gustatory impairment linked to a degeneration of the gustatory cortex. It was observed that the performance of subjects with minor or major cognitive impairment was weaker than that of healthy subjects, without the patient being aware of these taste disorders.

The aim of the study is to explore taste functions in patients with minor cognitive impairment, major cognitive impairment such as mild Alzheimer's disease, by comparing them to healthy subjects. For this purpose, we wish to compare the results of subjective taste tests (tasting solutions, especially salty ones, answering food preference questionnaires), parameters of taste evoked potentials recorded by electrodes stuck on the scalp and hormonal parameters obtained by blood sampling, between the three groups of subjects mentioned.

Enrollment

45 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • A person who has given oral consent.
  • For patients with early stage Alzheimer's disease, both the primary caregiver and the patient will need to give oral consent.
  • ADULT
  • Body Mass Index (BMI) < 30 kg/m².
  • Patients meeting the diagnostic criteria for early-stage Alzheimer's disease: imaging (cerebral MRI), neuropsychobiological criteria (consultation with neuropsychological assessment, CSF biomarkers) and CDR (Clinical Dementia Rating Scale) rated at 1 or 1.5 - for the "subjects with early-stage Alzheimer's disease" group
  • Patients meeting the diagnostic criteria for minor cognitive impairment: imaging (brain MRI) and neuropsychological assessment with a CDR scale of 0.5 - for the group "subjects with minor cognitive impairment".
  • Absence of cognitive problems and normal neurological assessment - for the healthy group.
  • Fasting at least 2 hours before PEG measurement

Exclusion criteria

    • A person who is not affiliated to or not a beneficiary of a social security system.
  • Person subject to a measure of legal protection (curatorship, guardianship)
  • Person subject to a judicial safeguard measure
  • Pregnant, parturient or breastfeeding woman
  • Adult unable to express consent or perform cognitive testing.
  • Minor
  • No Caregiver for Mild Alzheimer's Disease Patients
  • Active smoker
  • Diabetes (type 1 or type 2)
  • Taking a treatment that interferes with taste
  • Body Mass Index (BMI) ≥ 30 kg/m2
  • MMS Score <20
  • Cerebral MRI finding another cause of neurocognitive disorder (except for Fazekas 1 vascular lesions accepted).
  • Known COVID-19 infection

Trial design

Primary purpose

Diagnostic

Allocation

Non-Randomized

Interventional model

Parallel Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

45 participants in 3 patient groups

Major Cognitive Impairment
Experimental group
Treatment:
Biological: Blood sampling
Other: Subjective taste tests
Other: Cognitive Assessment
Other: Objective taste tests
Minor Cognitive Impairment
Experimental group
Treatment:
Biological: Blood sampling
Other: Subjective taste tests
Other: Cognitive Assessment
Other: Objective taste tests
No Cognitive Impairment
Active Comparator group
Treatment:
Biological: Blood sampling
Other: Subjective taste tests
Other: Cognitive Assessment
Other: Objective taste tests

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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