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Using a Speech-Generating Device to Support Communication in Childhood Dementia

M

Murdoch Childrens Research Institute

Status

Not yet enrolling

Conditions

Nonverbal Communication
Augmentative and Alternative Communication
Genetic Disease
Childhood Dementia

Treatments

Other: Control
Device: Speech-generating device

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

Details and patient eligibility

About

Individuals with childhood dementia experience loss of developmental skills and many have limited verbal speech. The aim of this clinical trial is to examine how well a speech-generating device supports the communication skills of participants with childhood dementia. The speech-generating device is a communication program loaded onto an iPad.

This is a crossover trial, meaning that each participant will receive both the treatment (device) and a control (usual care; no device) phase. The order in which each participant receives the device versus the usual care (no device) will depend on which group the participant is assigned to. The changes in communication in each phase will then be compared.

During the trial, participants can expect to complete a series of assessments and attend a total of 2 x 1-hour therapy session per week for 6 weeks.

Full description

The umbrella term 'childhood dementia' describes the hundreds of rare neurodegenerative genetic disorders occurring in children. Individuals with childhood dementia experience loss of developmental skills - many children have limited verbal speech to begin with but continue to lose their ability to communicate as the disease progresses. Augmentative and alternative communication (AAC) is one of the ways to support children with little speech and children with childhood dementia should have access to such tools as early as possible. However, the efficacy of high-tech AAC methods, such as speech generating devices, for children with childhood dementia has not been rigorously examined.

In this randomised cross-over trial, 38 participants with childhood dementia will be randomised into two groups (n=19 per group), which will determine the sequence of treatment delivery. The primary aim of this trial is to evaluate the efficacy of implementing a speech-generating device for communication in childhood dementia compared with their usual care (i.e. no device). Change in communication will be measured using a patient-defined outcome - this outcome is a 'communicative act' chosen at the beginning of the trial with participants and their family. This means that each participant will have an individualised communication outcome which will be targeted during treatment sessions and measured in assessment sessions. The secondary aims include parent-reported communication, family impact and language/communication competence.

Each participant will complete screening, preference testing and baseline assessments about 2-4 weeks before randomisation. Further assessments will be completed before and after each phase. For each participant, the change in assessment scores between the start and the end of each period will be calculated. The mean difference in the change in total score between the two periods will then be calculated.

Each participant is expected to be involved in the study for 12 weeks after randomisation. This is split into two phases (6 weeks each). In the treatment (device) phase, each participant will receive two 1-hour therapy sessions per week, for 6 weeks, with a communication device (or 12 x 1-hour therapy within a 6-week treatment phase). The device is implemented by a qualified speech pathologist on the project team and can occur at Murdoch Children's Research Institute or at the participants' home.

The control (usual care) phase involves another 6 weeks, however, no therapy sessions are provided by the project team. Weekly phone-call or telehealth check-ins will be performed to ensure things are going smoothly.

Enrollment

38 estimated patients

Sex

All

Ages

3 to 12 years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Is between the ages of 3 and 12 years, inclusive, at the time of enrolment
  • Has a genetically confirmed Childhood Dementia (via genetic report from a qualified geneticist), meeting the definition outlined in Elvidge et al. (2023) or is a condition listed on https://www.childhooddementia.org/what-is-childhood-dementia/childhood-dementia-disorders
  • Passes a visual-motor screening test, therefore being able to tap on an iPad spontaneously or by imitation and has adequate hearing
  • Considered "minimally verbal" with less than 20 spontaneous words (or gestalts) at baseline assessments, confirmed with the LVIS.
  • Is not currently using a speech-generating device with proficiency (i.e. using the device as a main mode of communication on a daily basis).
  • Is English-speaking or consents to therapy being conducted in English (parents will need to be able to complete the parent-reported measures in English)

Exclusion criteria

  • Has an additional or dual genetic variation (as this is likely to cause multiple complications and increase variability),
  • Is extremely ill or has progressed into a later stage of their disease (i.e. child has clinically significant loss of vision, hearing, fine motor skills, or is unable to adequately attend sessions due to illness),
  • This is to ensure treatment is beneficial, reduce harm and reduce attrition rates.
  • Lives outside of the state of Victoria (making it difficult for in-person appointments)
  • Inability or unwillingness of participant or legally acceptable representative to give written informed consent.

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

38 participants in 2 patient groups

Treatment then Control
Other group
Description:
The arm receives the intervention (device), then the control
Treatment:
Device: Speech-generating device
Other: Control
Control then Treatment
Other group
Description:
The arm receives the control, then the treatment (device)
Treatment:
Device: Speech-generating device
Other: Control

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Central trial contact

Angela T Morgan; Shui J Wong

Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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