MedPath

Listen in: Developing and Testing a Therapy Application for Patients With Speech Comprehension Deficits After Stroke.

Not Applicable
Completed
Conditions
Aphasia
Interventions
Behavioral: Auditory comprehension therapy.
Registration Number
NCT02540889
Lead Sponsor
University College, London
Brief Summary

The main aim is to develop and test the clinical efficacy of a novel, web based, rehabilitation application. Listen-In will provide an effective speech comprehension training tool that patients with aphasia can use to practice independently. This will free up therapists time to provide additional assessment, supervision and functional intervention in a highly cost effective manner.

Detailed Description

The main aim is to develop and test the clinical efficacy of a novel, web based, rehabilitation application. Listen In will provide an effective speech comprehension training tool that patients can use to practice independently. This will free up SALT time to provide additional assessment, supervision and functional intervention in a highly cost effective manner.

Phase 1 (24 months. London, Newcastle, Cambridge): Development of Listen In, including diagnostic and therapeutic components, driven by patient user's feedback (alpha and beta testing). The intervention is detailed below and is based on current SALT practice. It will be adaptive, provide feedback and target auditory perception at many levels: the phonemic, lexical and sentence level processing of heard verbal stimuli, as well as auditory short term memory and nonverbal sound discrimination.

Phase 2 (12 months. London and Cambridge): A pilot, randomised, crossover, clinical trial of Listen-In in a group of aphasic patients in the chronic post-stroke period. A power calculation suggests that we will need 36 patents, 18 in each arm. The comparison will be standard SALT clinical care. The main outcome measure is a clinically relevant improvement on the comprehension of spoken language score of the Comprehensive Aphasia Test (Swinburn, 2004). Secondary outcomes include improvements in social activity and participation. The milestones for this phase will be: 50% recruitment into study and last patient, last visit.

Phase 3 (funded outside i4i grant) will be the rollout of the therapy application on the internet with a pragmatic trial of whether therapy gains can be made outside the confines of a clinical trial. The comparison will be on similar outcome measures as Phase 2 with a control test on sustained attention (internal control) that we predict will not improve with therapy.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
36
Inclusion Criteria
  • any type of stroke but greater than 6 months post onset
  • evidence of receptive aphasia
  • English as their main language
  • able to give informed consent
  • age 18 years or above
  • no diagnosis of degenerative brain disease.
Exclusion Criteria
  • Stroke less than 6 months post onset
  • No evidence of receptive aphasia
  • English not their main language
  • Unable to give informed consent
  • Less than 18 years old
  • diagnosis of degenerative brain disease.

Study & Design

Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Study Design
CROSSOVER
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
trial armAuditory comprehension therapy.100 hours of therapy.
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Improvement in auditory comprehension on the comprehensive aphasia test.Measured over 36 weeks (0,12,24,36) weeks

Investigation of improvement on a functionally relevant area of a widely used test of aphasia.

Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
Improvement in written language comprehensionMeasured over 36 weeks (0,12,24,36) weeks

Investigation of improvement on a functionally relevant area of a widely used test of aphasia.

Improvement in functional communicationMeasured over 36 weeks (0,12,24,36) weeks

Using patient reported outcomes to look at functional communication changes.

Performance on the Sustained attention to response taskMeasured over 36 weeks (0,12,24,36) weeks

Investigation of improvement on sustained attention using the SART.

Environmental sounds testMeasured over 36 weeks (0,12,24,36) weeks

Investigation of improvement on the non verbal environmental sounds test.

Improvement in production of languageMeasured over 36 weeks (0,12,24,36) weeks

Investigation of improvement on a functionally relevant area of a widely used test of aphasia.

Test of semanticsMeasured over 36 weeks (0,12,24,36) weeks

Investigation of improvement in semantics knowledge.

Improvement on auditory descriminationMeasured over 36 weeks (0,12,24,36) weeks

Investigation of improvement on a test of auditory discrimination developed by Dr Holly Robson.

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

UCLondon

🇬🇧

London, United Kingdom

© Copyright 2025. All Rights Reserved by MedPath