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Description of the Method for Evaluating Digital Endpoints in Alzheimer Disease Study: Protocol for an Exploratory, Cross-sectional Study

BACKGROUND: More sensitive and less burdensome efficacy end points are urgently needed to improve the effectiveness of clinical drug development for Alzheimer disease (AD). Although conventional end points lack sensitivity, digital technologies hold promise for amplifying the detection of treatment...

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Autores principales: Curcic, Jelena, Vallejo, Vanessa, Sorinas, Jennifer, Sverdlov, Oleksandr, Praestgaard, Jens, Piksa, Mateusz, Deurinck, Mark, Erdemli, Gul, Bügler, Maximilian, Tarnanas, Ioannis, Taptiklis, Nick, Cormack, Francesca, Anker, Rebekka, Massé, Fabien, Souillard-Mandar, William, Intrator, Nathan, Molcho, Lior, Madero, Erica, Bott, Nicholas, Chambers, Mieko, Tamory, Josef, Shulz, Matias, Fernandez, Gerardo, Simpson, William, Robin, Jessica, Snædal, Jón G, Cha, Jang-Ho, Hannesdottir, Kristin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: JMIR Publications 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9403829/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35947423
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/35442
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author Curcic, Jelena
Vallejo, Vanessa
Sorinas, Jennifer
Sverdlov, Oleksandr
Praestgaard, Jens
Piksa, Mateusz
Deurinck, Mark
Erdemli, Gul
Bügler, Maximilian
Tarnanas, Ioannis
Taptiklis, Nick
Cormack, Francesca
Anker, Rebekka
Massé, Fabien
Souillard-Mandar, William
Intrator, Nathan
Molcho, Lior
Madero, Erica
Bott, Nicholas
Chambers, Mieko
Tamory, Josef
Shulz, Matias
Fernandez, Gerardo
Simpson, William
Robin, Jessica
Snædal, Jón G
Cha, Jang-Ho
Hannesdottir, Kristin
author_facet Curcic, Jelena
Vallejo, Vanessa
Sorinas, Jennifer
Sverdlov, Oleksandr
Praestgaard, Jens
Piksa, Mateusz
Deurinck, Mark
Erdemli, Gul
Bügler, Maximilian
Tarnanas, Ioannis
Taptiklis, Nick
Cormack, Francesca
Anker, Rebekka
Massé, Fabien
Souillard-Mandar, William
Intrator, Nathan
Molcho, Lior
Madero, Erica
Bott, Nicholas
Chambers, Mieko
Tamory, Josef
Shulz, Matias
Fernandez, Gerardo
Simpson, William
Robin, Jessica
Snædal, Jón G
Cha, Jang-Ho
Hannesdottir, Kristin
author_sort Curcic, Jelena
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: More sensitive and less burdensome efficacy end points are urgently needed to improve the effectiveness of clinical drug development for Alzheimer disease (AD). Although conventional end points lack sensitivity, digital technologies hold promise for amplifying the detection of treatment signals and capturing cognitive anomalies at earlier disease stages. Using digital technologies and combining several test modalities allow for the collection of richer information about cognitive and functional status, which is not ascertainable via conventional paper-and-pencil tests. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to assess the psychometric properties, operational feasibility, and patient acceptance of 10 promising technologies that are to be used as efficacy end points to measure cognition in future clinical drug trials. METHODS: The Method for Evaluating Digital Endpoints in Alzheimer Disease study is an exploratory, cross-sectional, noninterventional study that will evaluate 10 digital technologies’ ability to accurately classify participants into 4 cohorts according to the severity of cognitive impairment and dementia. Moreover, this study will assess the psychometric properties of each of the tested digital technologies, including the acceptable range to assess ceiling and floor effects, concurrent validity to correlate digital outcome measures to traditional paper-and-pencil tests in AD, reliability to compare test and retest, and responsiveness to evaluate the sensitivity to change in a mild cognitive challenge model. This study included 50 eligible male and female participants (aged between 60 and 80 years), of whom 13 (26%) were amyloid-negative, cognitively healthy participants (controls); 12 (24%) were amyloid-positive, cognitively healthy participants (presymptomatic); 13 (26%) had mild cognitive impairment (predementia); and 12 (24%) had mild AD (mild dementia). This study involved 4 in-clinic visits. During the initial visit, all participants completed all conventional paper-and-pencil assessments. During the following 3 visits, the participants underwent a series of novel digital assessments. RESULTS: Participant recruitment and data collection began in June 2020 and continued until June 2021. Hence, the data collection occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic (SARS-CoV-2 virus pandemic). Data were successfully collected from all digital technologies to evaluate statistical and operational performance and patient acceptance. This paper reports the baseline demographics and characteristics of the population studied as well as the study's progress during the pandemic. CONCLUSIONS: This study was designed to generate feasibility insights and validation data to help advance novel digital technologies in clinical drug development. The learnings from this study will help guide future methods for assessing novel digital technologies and inform clinical drug trials in early AD, aiming to enhance clinical end point strategies with digital technologies. INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): DERR1-10.2196/35442
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spelling pubmed-94038292022-08-26 Description of the Method for Evaluating Digital Endpoints in Alzheimer Disease Study: Protocol for an Exploratory, Cross-sectional Study Curcic, Jelena Vallejo, Vanessa Sorinas, Jennifer Sverdlov, Oleksandr Praestgaard, Jens Piksa, Mateusz Deurinck, Mark Erdemli, Gul Bügler, Maximilian Tarnanas, Ioannis Taptiklis, Nick Cormack, Francesca Anker, Rebekka Massé, Fabien Souillard-Mandar, William Intrator, Nathan Molcho, Lior Madero, Erica Bott, Nicholas Chambers, Mieko Tamory, Josef Shulz, Matias Fernandez, Gerardo Simpson, William Robin, Jessica Snædal, Jón G Cha, Jang-Ho Hannesdottir, Kristin JMIR Res Protoc Protocol BACKGROUND: More sensitive and less burdensome efficacy end points are urgently needed to improve the effectiveness of clinical drug development for Alzheimer disease (AD). Although conventional end points lack sensitivity, digital technologies hold promise for amplifying the detection of treatment signals and capturing cognitive anomalies at earlier disease stages. Using digital technologies and combining several test modalities allow for the collection of richer information about cognitive and functional status, which is not ascertainable via conventional paper-and-pencil tests. OBJECTIVE: This study aimed to assess the psychometric properties, operational feasibility, and patient acceptance of 10 promising technologies that are to be used as efficacy end points to measure cognition in future clinical drug trials. METHODS: The Method for Evaluating Digital Endpoints in Alzheimer Disease study is an exploratory, cross-sectional, noninterventional study that will evaluate 10 digital technologies’ ability to accurately classify participants into 4 cohorts according to the severity of cognitive impairment and dementia. Moreover, this study will assess the psychometric properties of each of the tested digital technologies, including the acceptable range to assess ceiling and floor effects, concurrent validity to correlate digital outcome measures to traditional paper-and-pencil tests in AD, reliability to compare test and retest, and responsiveness to evaluate the sensitivity to change in a mild cognitive challenge model. This study included 50 eligible male and female participants (aged between 60 and 80 years), of whom 13 (26%) were amyloid-negative, cognitively healthy participants (controls); 12 (24%) were amyloid-positive, cognitively healthy participants (presymptomatic); 13 (26%) had mild cognitive impairment (predementia); and 12 (24%) had mild AD (mild dementia). This study involved 4 in-clinic visits. During the initial visit, all participants completed all conventional paper-and-pencil assessments. During the following 3 visits, the participants underwent a series of novel digital assessments. RESULTS: Participant recruitment and data collection began in June 2020 and continued until June 2021. Hence, the data collection occurred during the COVID-19 pandemic (SARS-CoV-2 virus pandemic). Data were successfully collected from all digital technologies to evaluate statistical and operational performance and patient acceptance. This paper reports the baseline demographics and characteristics of the population studied as well as the study's progress during the pandemic. CONCLUSIONS: This study was designed to generate feasibility insights and validation data to help advance novel digital technologies in clinical drug development. The learnings from this study will help guide future methods for assessing novel digital technologies and inform clinical drug trials in early AD, aiming to enhance clinical end point strategies with digital technologies. INTERNATIONAL REGISTERED REPORT IDENTIFIER (IRRID): DERR1-10.2196/35442 JMIR Publications 2022-08-10 /pmc/articles/PMC9403829/ /pubmed/35947423 http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/35442 Text en ©Jelena Curcic, Vanessa Vallejo, Jennifer Sorinas, Oleksandr Sverdlov, Jens Praestgaard, Mateusz Piksa, Mark Deurinck, Gul Erdemli, Maximilian Bügler, Ioannis Tarnanas, Nick Taptiklis, Francesca Cormack, Rebekka Anker, Fabien Massé, William Souillard-Mandar, Nathan Intrator, Lior Molcho, Erica Madero, Nicholas Bott, Mieko Chambers, Josef Tamory, Matias Shulz, Gerardo Fernandez, William Simpson, Jessica Robin, Jón G Snædal, Jang-Ho Cha, Kristin Hannesdottir. Originally published in JMIR Research Protocols (https://www.researchprotocols.org), 10.08.2022. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work, first published in JMIR Research Protocols, is properly cited. The complete bibliographic information, a link to the original publication on https://www.researchprotocols.org, as well as this copyright and license information must be included.
spellingShingle Protocol
Curcic, Jelena
Vallejo, Vanessa
Sorinas, Jennifer
Sverdlov, Oleksandr
Praestgaard, Jens
Piksa, Mateusz
Deurinck, Mark
Erdemli, Gul
Bügler, Maximilian
Tarnanas, Ioannis
Taptiklis, Nick
Cormack, Francesca
Anker, Rebekka
Massé, Fabien
Souillard-Mandar, William
Intrator, Nathan
Molcho, Lior
Madero, Erica
Bott, Nicholas
Chambers, Mieko
Tamory, Josef
Shulz, Matias
Fernandez, Gerardo
Simpson, William
Robin, Jessica
Snædal, Jón G
Cha, Jang-Ho
Hannesdottir, Kristin
Description of the Method for Evaluating Digital Endpoints in Alzheimer Disease Study: Protocol for an Exploratory, Cross-sectional Study
title Description of the Method for Evaluating Digital Endpoints in Alzheimer Disease Study: Protocol for an Exploratory, Cross-sectional Study
title_full Description of the Method for Evaluating Digital Endpoints in Alzheimer Disease Study: Protocol for an Exploratory, Cross-sectional Study
title_fullStr Description of the Method for Evaluating Digital Endpoints in Alzheimer Disease Study: Protocol for an Exploratory, Cross-sectional Study
title_full_unstemmed Description of the Method for Evaluating Digital Endpoints in Alzheimer Disease Study: Protocol for an Exploratory, Cross-sectional Study
title_short Description of the Method for Evaluating Digital Endpoints in Alzheimer Disease Study: Protocol for an Exploratory, Cross-sectional Study
title_sort description of the method for evaluating digital endpoints in alzheimer disease study: protocol for an exploratory, cross-sectional study
topic Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9403829/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35947423
http://dx.doi.org/10.2196/35442
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