Transferring Speed of Processing Gains to Everyday Cognitive Tasks after Stroke

NIH RePORTER · NIH · R01 · $598,330 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

ABSTRACT Many individuals with cognitive impairment experience decrements in everyday function that can signal encroaching dementia. For every year that cognitive decline is delayed there is substantial savings in patient care costs and inestimable savings in quality of life for patients and family members. The prevalence of cognitive impairment in chronic stroke is approximately 50%. A number of techniques have been found to improve various aspects of cognition in the training situation. However, their transfer to everyday situations outside the training setting has been limited as is retention. They are therefore of reduced or narrow practical value. A cognitive ability that is improved but not used to enhance real-world performance has limited significance. Pilot work has been carried out here with a novel intervention designed to fill these crucial gaps. The results are very promising. The purpose of the proposed research is to carry out a randomized controlled trial (RCT) with a large enough sample to rigorously evaluate these preliminary results. The new treatment to be tested combines two repeatedly validated rehabilitation methods: the Transfer Package of CI Movement Therapy and Speed of Cognitive Processing Training. The purpose of doing so is to produce a marked enhancement in the transfer of cognitive improvement from the training setting to instrumental activities of daily living (IADL) in everyday situations. Both halves of the new combination therapy are founded on the investigators' own basic research. In both cases, efficacy is supported by positive results from multiple single-site RCTs and a large multisite RCT. However, the effect of Speed of Processing Training has been found to have limited generalization to cognitive-based IADL in everyday situations. In contrast, one of the main strengths of CI Therapy is that it produces a robust and extensive transfer of treatment effect to everyday life situations by means, in part, of its Transfer Package. A second strength of the Transfer Package of CI Therapy is long-term retention of its effect. In our initial work, the Transfer Package procedures that this lab has used effectively to transfer motor gains from the treatment to everyday setting were adapted to transfer cognitive gains from the treatment to the everyday setting. We propose here an RCT with 2 arms: Speed of Processing Training (SOPT) in the lab combined with the TP (TP+) and SOPT in the lab but without the TP (TP-). Participants will be 120 adults more than 1-year post-stroke with mild to moderate cognitive impairment. Performance on cognitive-based tasks will be measured in daily life and in the lab before and after baseline, after treatment, and 6- and 12-months afterwards. This design will permit rigorous testing of the value of the Transfer Package with an adequate sample size, objective measurement, blinding, and between-subjects control for amount and intensity of training and therapist contact.

Key facts

NIH application ID
10480911
Project number
5R01AG070049-02
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF ALABAMA AT BIRMINGHAM
Principal Investigator
KARLENE K BALL
Activity code
R01
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2022
Award amount
$598,330
Award type
5
Project period
2021-09-05 → 2025-08-31