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Clinical Trials/NCT05728840
NCT05728840
Recruiting
Not Applicable

Virtual-reality Exercises for Alleviating Attention Deficits in Patients With Acquired Brain Injury

Mindmaze SA1 site in 1 country135 target enrollmentFebruary 15, 2023

Overview

Phase
Not Applicable
Intervention
Immersive virtual reality gamified cognitive activities
Conditions
Stroke
Sponsor
Mindmaze SA
Enrollment
135
Locations
1
Primary Endpoint
Change from baseline in Test of Attentional Performance (TAP)
Status
Recruiting
Last Updated
2 months ago

Overview

Brief Summary

Stroke is the leading cause of long-term disability with an increasing incidence, especially in young adults. Among the cognitive difficulties following brain damage, deficits in attention are frequent and pervasive, affecting between 46% and 92% of stroke survivors. The current project targets patients with acquired brain injury, including stroke, traumatic brain injury, and brain tumor. The main objective of this study is to evaluate the use and the efficacy of a training program targeting attention and executive function difficulties, using gamified and digitized versions in virtual reality of standard cognitive exercises for patients with brain lesions.

Detailed Description

Among the cognitive disorders due to stroke, attention impairments are frequent and pervading deficits with a variable incidence ranging from 46% to 92% for attention deficits. Stroke patients may have difficulties to focus, pay attention or attend to more than one stimulus at a time. These deficits are insufficiently addressed in the current standard of care. The proposed study is a three-arm (N=45 per group), double-blind, randomized, and actively controlled study. This study uses immersive virtual reality (VR) based training protocols to address attention and executive dysfunctions in patients with stroke. For each cognitive domain, the solution proposes specific gamified activities, with different levels of difficulty, titrated to the patient's level of impairment, assessed by embedded short assessments. The investigators hypothesize that a daily training using VR-based gamified neuropsychological activities, in addition to standard of care, will decrease attention and executive deficits as much as time-matched daily extra neuropsychological sessions of standard of care. The investigators hypothesize too that delivering such daily extra session of VR-based gamified neuropsychological activities in addition to the standard of care will decrease more attention deficits than the actual regular standard of care dose. The primary outcome will be the change in attentional abilities, measured by standardized tests of attention, before and after 20 sessions of VR-based training for the experimental group and 20 additional neuropsychological are sessions for the dose-match control group. The secondary outcomes will include changes in spatial cognition, attention in activities of daily life, executive functions, influence of the lesions' etiology, impression of our rehabilitation program as a credible treatment, among others.

Registry
clinicaltrials.gov
Start Date
February 15, 2023
End Date
July 31, 2026
Last Updated
2 months ago
Study Type
Interventional
Study Design
Parallel
Sex
All

Investigators

Responsible Party
Sponsor

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria

  • Time from stroke onset \< 1 month
  • Objective pathological performance on at least one standardized test or subtest on attention during standard neuropsychological evaluation
  • Brain injury documented by routine neuroradiological examination (computed tomography or magnetic resonance imaging scan)
  • Able to give informed consent as documented by signature
  • Age \>= 18 years old

Exclusion Criteria

  • Inability or contraindications to undergo the investigated intervention
  • Major psychiatric co-morbidity
  • Major neurocognitive deficits (e.g. dementia)
  • Incapacity to discriminate colors
  • General cognitive state preventing to understand and perform the tasks
  • Decision to not be informed of incidental findings

Arms & Interventions

Rehabilitation intervention group

Each participant of the experimental group will undergo an initial cognitive screening (pre-training) and, in addition to their standard of care, they will have 20 additional sessions with the experimental rehabilitation program. Post-treatment cognitive screening will be completed at the end of the program, then 3-4 and 6-12 months later.

Intervention: Immersive virtual reality gamified cognitive activities

Dose-match control group

Each participant of the experimental group will undergo an initial cognitive screening (pre-training) and, in addition to their standard of care, they will have 20 additional sessions of neuropsychological standard sessions. Post-treatment cognitive screening will be completed at the end of the program, then 3-4 and 6-12 months later.

Intervention: Double neuropsychological standard activities

Retrospective standard of care group

Each participant of the retrospective group will be included retrospectively if they were hospitalized in the study's sites between 2012 and 2022, and followed standard neuropsychological rehabilitation of attention.

Outcomes

Primary Outcomes

Change from baseline in Test of Attentional Performance (TAP)

Time Frame: Before the intervention (baseline) and after 20 days of training (end of intervention), within 7 weeks from first day of training

Main deficit of Attention

Secondary Outcomes

  • Credibility/Expectancy Questionnaire (CEQ)(Before the intervention (baseline), after 20 days of training (end of intervention), 3-4 and 6-12 months after the end of intervention)
  • Wechsler Memory Scale (WMS-III)(Before the intervention (baseline), after 20 days of training (end of intervention), 3-4 and 6-12 months after the end of intervention)
  • Stroop test(Before the intervention (baseline), after 20 days of training (end of intervention), 3-4 and 6-12 months after the end of intervention)
  • Test of Attentional Performance (TAP)(Before the intervention (baseline), after 20 days of training (end of intervention), 3-4 and 6-12 months after the end of intervention)
  • Brief Visuospatial Memory Test (BVMT)(Before the intervention (baseline), after 20 days of training (end of intervention), 3-4 and 6-12 months after the end of intervention)
  • Rating Scale of Attentional Behaviour (RSAB)(Before the intervention (baseline), after 20 days of training (end of intervention), 3-4 and 6-12 months after the end of intervention)
  • Catherine Bergego Scale (CBS)(Before the intervention (baseline), after 20 days of training (end of intervention), 3-4 and 6-12 months after the end of intervention)
  • Stroke impact Scale (SIS)(Before the intervention (baseline), after 20 days of training (end of intervention), 3-4 and 6-12 months after the end of intervention)
  • Far space attention: Hemineglect far space Immersive VR-based task(Before the intervention (baseline), after 20 days of training (end of intervention), 3-4 and 6-12 months after the end of intervention)
  • Immersive VR-based attentional performance task(Before the intervention (baseline), after each cycle of 5 days of training, after 20 days of training (end of intervention), 3-4 and 6-12 months after the end of intervention)
  • Defense Automated Neurobehavioral Assessment (DANA)(Before the intervention (baseline), after each cycle of 5 days of training, after 20 days of training (end of intervention), 3-4 and 6-12 months after the end of intervention)
  • User Engagement Scale (UES)(After 20 days of training (end of intervention))
  • NASA task load index (NASA-TLX)(After 20 days of training (end of intervention))
  • Response to saliency: Immersive VR-based free-viewing exploration (FVE-VR) task(Before the intervention (baseline), after 20 days of training (end of intervention), 3-4 and 6-12 months after the end of intervention)
  • Fatigue: Penner questionnaire(Before the intervention (baseline), after 20 days of training (end of intervention), 3-4 and 6-12 months after the end of intervention)
  • Test of Attentional Performance (TAP)(Before the intervention (baseline), after 10 days of training (mid-training), 3-4 and 6-12 months after the end of intervention)

Study Sites (1)

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