- ICH GCP
- US Clinical Trials Registry
- Clinical Trial NCT03887481
Targeting Language-specific and Executive-control Networks With Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation in Logopenic Variant PPA
Targeting Language-specific and Executive-control Networks With Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation in Aphasic AD (Logopenic Variant PPA)
AD afflicts over 5.5. million Americans and is one of the most expensive diseases worldwide. In AD the variant in which language functions are most affected are referred to as 'logopenic variant Primary Progressive Aphasia' (lvPPA). Language deficits dramatically impair communication and quality of life for both patients and caregivers. PPA usually has an early onset (50-65 years of age), detrimentally affecting work and family life. Studies have identified verbal short-term memory/working memory (vSTM/WM) as a primary deficit and cause of language impairment. In the first cycle of this award, the investigators asked the question of whether language therapy effects could be augmented by electrical stimulation. The investigators conducted the largest to-date randomized, double-blind, sham-controlled, crossover, clinical trial to determine the effects of transcranial direct current stimulation (tDCS) in PPA. The investigators found that tDCS over the left inferior frontal gyrus (L_IFG), one of the major language hubs in the brain, significantly enhanced the effects of a written naming and spelling intervention. In addition, findings demonstrated that tDCS modulates functional connectivity between the stimulated area and other networks (e.g. functionally and structurally connected areas), and that tDCS modulates the inhibitory neurotransmitter gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). In terms of tDCS, the investigators have been identified several predictors to determine the beneficience of tDCS including (a) PPA variant, (b) initial performance on cognitive/language tasks, particularly vSTM/WM, and (c) initial white-matter integrity and structure. These findings support the notion that tDCS benefits generalize beyond the treatment tasks and has led to the important question of the present study: How can we implement treatments to product benefits that maximally generalize to untrained but vital language/cognitive functions.
To address the above question, the investigators will test recent neuroplasticity theories that claim that the benefits of neuromodulation to language-specific areas generalize to other language functions within the language network, while neuromodulation of a domain-general/multiple-demands area generalizes to both domain-general, executive and language functions. The two areas to be stimulated will be the supramarginal gyrus (SMG) and left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) respectively. The left supramarginal gyrus (L_SMG) in particular, specializes in phonological processing, namely phonological verbal short-term memory (vSTM), i.e., the ability to temporarily store phonological (and graphemic) information in order. The domain of vSTM affects many language tasks (repetition, naming, syntax), which makes it an ideal treatment target and the L_SMG an ideal stimulation target, since generalization of tDCS effects to other language tasks is driven by the function (computation) of the stimulated area. By testing a fundamental principle of neuromodulation in a devastating neurodegenerative disorder, the investigators will significantly advance the field of neurorehabilitation in early-onset dementias.
Aim 1: To determine whether vSTM/WM behavioral therapy combined with high definition (HD)-tDCS over the L_SMG will induce more generalization to language-specific tasks than to executive tasks, whereas stimulation over the LDPFC will induce equivalent generalization to both executive and language-specific tasks.
Aim 2: To understand the mechanism of tDCS by measuring tDCS-induced changes in network functional connectivity (FC) and GABA in the LSMG and LDPFC. The investigators will carry out resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (rsfMRI), (MPRAGE), diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI), perfusion imaging (pCASL), and magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS), before, after, and 3-months post-intervention.
Aim 3: To identify the neural, cognitive, physiological, clinical and demographic characteristics (biomarkers) that predict sham, tDCS, and tDCS vs. sham effects on vSTM and related language tasks in PPA. The investigators will evaluate neural (functional and structural connectivity, cortical volume, neuropeptides, and perfusion), cognitive (memory, attention, executive) and language functions, clinical (severity), physiological (sleep), and demographic (age, gender) characteristics, and the investigators will analyze the effects on vSTM and other language/cognitive outcomes immediately after intervention and at 3 months post-intervention.
Study Overview
Status
Detailed Description
Study Type
Enrollment (Estimated)
Phase
- Not Applicable
Contacts and Locations
Study Contact
- Name: Kelly Eun
- Phone Number: (410) 929 - 0279
- Email: krmeun@jhmi.edu
Study Contact Backup
- Name: Cesia Diaz
- Phone Number: (410) 417 - 8230
- Email: cesiad@jhmi.edu
Study Locations
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Maryland
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Baltimore, Maryland, United States, 21287
- Recruiting
- Johns Hopkins Hospital
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Contact:
- Kyrana Tsapkini, PhD
- Phone Number: 410-736-2940
- Email: tsapkini@jhmi.edu
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Principal Investigator:
- Kyrana Tsapkini, PhD
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Participation Criteria
Eligibility Criteria
Ages Eligible for Study
Accepts Healthy Volunteers
Description
Inclusion Criteria:
- Must be between 50-80 years of age.
- Must be right-handed.
- Must be proficient in English.
- Must have a minimum of high-school education.
- Must be diagnosed with Primary Progressive Aphasia (PPA) or dementia.
- Participants will be diagnosed with PPA or with any of the PPA variants in specialized or early dementias clinics at Johns Hopkins University or other specialized centers in the US based on the current consensus criteria.
- Healthy age- and education-matched controls: The investigators will include 30 healthy age- and education-matched controls, usually spouses, to maximize similarity in terms of other demographic or life-style factors that contribute to language and cognitive performance.
Exclusion Criteria:
- People with previous neurological disease including vascular dementia (e.g., stroke, developmental dyslexia, dysgraphia or attentional deficit).
- People with uncorrected hearing loss
- People with uncorrected visual acuity loss.
- People with advanced dementia or severe language impairments: Mini Mental State -Examination (MMSE)<18, or Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MOCA)<15, or language Frontotemporal Dementia specific - Clinical Dementia Rating (FTD-CDR)<=2.
- Left handed individuals.
- People with pre-existing psychiatric disorders such as behavioral disturbances, severe depression, or schizophrenia that do not allow these people to comply or follow the study schedule and requirements such as repeated evaluation and therapy.
Exclusion Criteria for MRI Participation:
- People with severe claustrophobia.
- People with cardiac pacemakers or ferromagnetic implants.
- Pregnant women.
Study Plan
How is the study designed?
Design Details
- Primary Purpose: Treatment
- Allocation: Randomized
- Interventional Model: Crossover Assignment
- Masking: Triple
Arms and Interventions
Participant Group / Arm |
Intervention / Treatment |
|---|---|
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Experimental: Active HD-tDCS + Language/Cognitive Intervention(s) first
Participants will receive active HD-tDCS + Language/Cognitive Intervention(s) first and then receive Sham + Language/Cognitive Intervention(s) after a three-month washout period.
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Device: Active HD-tDCS & "Repeat After Me" (RAM) Treatment Stimulation will be delivered by a battery-driven constant current stimulator. Electrical current will be administered to left supramarginal gyrus (L_SMG). The stimulation will be delivered at an intensity of 2 milliamperes (mA) (estimated current density 0.04 mA/cm2; estimated total charge 0.048 Coulombs/cm2) in a ramp-like fashion for a maximum of 20 minutes. Participants will receive RAM consisting of word span repetition span (increasing length, with/without response delay). Span tasks will be manipulated in terms of list length (single words, pair, triplets) and response delay (1 sec, 5 sec). Each list will consist of 10 spans. During each trial, participants will be asked to repeat words in the span after a response delay. Device: Sham Current will be administered in a ramp-like fashion but after the ramping phase the intensity will drop to 0 mA. Current under the Sham condition will last for a maximum of 30 seconds. Participants will receive RAM consisting of word span repetition span (increasing length, with/without response delay). Span tasks will be manipulated in terms of list length (single words, pair, triplets) and response delay (1 sec, 5 sec). Each list will consist of 10 spans. During each trial, participants will be asked to repeat words in the span after a response delay. |
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Experimental: Sham + Language/Cognitive Intervention(s) first
Participants will receive Sham + Language/Cognitive Intervention(s) first and then receive active HD-tDCS + Language/Cognitive Intervention(s) after a three-month washout period.
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Device: Active HD-tDCS & "Repeat After Me" (RAM) Treatment Stimulation will be delivered by a battery-driven constant current stimulator. Electrical current will be administered to left supramarginal gyrus (L_SMG). The stimulation will be delivered at an intensity of 2 milliamperes (mA) (estimated current density 0.04 mA/cm2; estimated total charge 0.048 Coulombs/cm2) in a ramp-like fashion for a maximum of 20 minutes. Participants will receive RAM consisting of word span repetition span (increasing length, with/without response delay). Span tasks will be manipulated in terms of list length (single words, pair, triplets) and response delay (1 sec, 5 sec). Each list will consist of 10 spans. During each trial, participants will be asked to repeat words in the span after a response delay. Device: Sham Current will be administered in a ramp-like fashion but after the ramping phase the intensity will drop to 0 mA. Current under the Sham condition will last for a maximum of 30 seconds. Participants will receive RAM consisting of word span repetition span (increasing length, with/without response delay). Span tasks will be manipulated in terms of list length (single words, pair, triplets) and response delay (1 sec, 5 sec). Each list will consist of 10 spans. During each trial, participants will be asked to repeat words in the span after a response delay. |
What is the study measuring?
Primary Outcome Measures
Outcome Measure |
Measure Description |
Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
|
Change in percent accuracy on word repetition (no delay) assessed by Temple Assessment of Language and Short-Term Memory in Aphasia (TALSA) Test 3
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
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The investigators will assess any changes in performance from pre- to post-treatment and 1- and 3- month follow-up intervals in percent accuracy on word repetition with no delay.
This will be measured using the Temple Assessment of Language and Short-Term Memory (TALSA) Test 3: Word and Non-Word Repetition Test.
The investigators will compute the raw score of items correct and transform to percent correct (range: 0-100%), computing change in outcome in percent difference as well as other arithmetic differences between percentage scores before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in scores is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1.
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Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
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Change in percent accuracy on word repetition (with 5-sec delay) assessed by TALSA Test 3
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
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The investigators will assess any changes in performance from pre- to post-treatment and 1- and 3- month follow-up intervals in percent accuracy on word repetition with delay (5-sec).
This will be measured using the TALSA Test 3: Word and Non-Word Repetition Test.
The investigators will compute the raw score of items correct and transform to percent correct (range: 0-100%), computing change in outcome in percent difference as well as other arithmetic differences between percentage scores before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in scores is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1.
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Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in percent accuracy on word span assessed by TALSA Test 14
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
The investigators will assess any changes in performance from pre- to post-treatment and 1- and 3- month follow-up intervals in percent accuracy on word span.
This will be measured using the TALSA Test 14: Word and Non-Word Repetition Span Test.
The investigators will use the span calculation outlined in the TALSA.
Span calculations consist of two numbers: the number of the last list length (LL) passed (e.g., 2 for pairs), and the proportion of correct strings out of the required strings to pass (5) of the next list.
The highest spans obtainable for this test is 5.00.
Increase in scores is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1.
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Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
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Secondary Outcome Measures
Outcome Measure |
Measure Description |
Time Frame |
|---|---|---|
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Change in TALSA sentence repetition (Test 7) score
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
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This sentence repetition task comes from the TALSA (Test 7) with scoring based on percent of words in sentences correctly repeated.
The investigators will compute the raw score of items correct and transform to percent correct (range: 0-100%).
Subsequently, the investigators will compute change in outcome in percent difference between before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a near-transfer task (i.e., vSTM related, showing generalization to other vSTM tasks).
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Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center's (NACC) sentence repetition score
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
This sentence repetition task comes from National Alzheimer's Coordinating Center's (NACC) FTLD Module with scoring based on percent of words in sentences correctly repeated.
The investigators will compute the raw score of items correct and transform to percent correct (range: 0-100%).
Subsequently, the investigators will compute change in outcome in percent difference between before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a near-transfer task (i.e., vSTM related, showing generalization to other vSTM tasks).
|
Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in digit span forward score
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
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The digit span forward is a well-established task that assesses rote immediate verbal memory.
Participants are presented with a series of digits and are instructed to repeat the digits in the same order.
The investigators will compute the raw score of items correctly repeated (up to 9) and compute change in outcome between before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a near-transfer task (i.e., vSTM related, showing generalization to other vSTM tasks).
|
Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in visual rhyming score
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
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The visual rhyming test assesses link between phonological and orthographic information.
Participants are presented words orthographically only and must indicate whether two words rhyme (e.g., pair-spare).
The investigators will compute the raw score of items correct and transform to percent correct (range: 0-100%).
Subsequently, the investigators will compute change in outcome in percent difference between before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a near-transfer task (i.e., vSTM related, showing generalization to other vSTM tasks).
|
Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in Northwestern Anagram Test (NAT) score
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
The Northwestern Anagram Test (NAT) assesses accuracy of word order (syntax) in sentence production.
Participants assemble individual words cards to create meaningful sentences.
The investigators will compute the raw score of items correct and transform to percent correct (range: 0-100%).
Subsequently, the investigators will compute change in outcome in percent difference between before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a near-transfer task (i.e., vSTM related, showing generalization to other vSTM tasks).
|
Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in NAVS - Argument Structure Production Test (ASPT) score
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
The Northwestern Assessment of Verbs and Sentences (NAVS) Argument Structure Production Test (ASPT) assesses combination of verbs with arguments in a sentence production task.
The investigators will compute the raw score of items correct and transform to percent correct (range: 0-100%).
Subsequently, the investigators will compute change in outcome in percent difference between before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a near-transfer task (i.e., vSTM related, showing generalization to other vSTM tasks).
|
Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in spelling of non-words to dictation score
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
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Accuracy in spelling non-words using the Johns Hopkins Dysgraphia battery will be assessed.
The investigators will compute the raw score of graphemes correct using a spelling scoring system accounting for additions, substitutions, and deletions, and transform to percent correct (range: 0-100%), computing change in outcome in percent difference before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a near-transfer task (i.e., vSTM related, showing generalization to other vSTM tasks).
|
Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in Apraxia Battery of Adults-Second Edition (ABA-2) score
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
The presence and severity of apraxia of speech (AOS) is measured using the Apraxia Battery for Adults-Second Edition (ABA-2), specifically through repeating words of increasing length and complexity and describing pictures.
The investigators will compute the raw score of items correct and transform to percent correct (range: 0-100%).
Subsequently, the investigators will compute change in outcome in percent difference between before intervention and each time point after.
Decrease in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a near-transfer task (i.e., vSTM related, showing generalization to other vSTM tasks).
|
Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in spelling of words to dictation score
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
Accuracy in spelling words using the Johns Hopkins Dysgraphia battery will be assessed.
The investigators will compute the raw score of graphemes correct using a spelling scoring system accounting for additions, substitutions, and deletions, and transform to percent correct (range: 0-100%), computing change in outcome in percent difference before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a far-transfer task (i.e., unrelated to vSTM, showing generalization to other language & cognitive tasks).
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Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in NAVS - Sentence Comprehension Test score
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
The Northwestern Assessment of Verbs and Sentences (NAVS) Sentence Comprehension Test (SCT) assesses comprehension of sentences given multiple types of sentences (e.g., canonical vs. non-canonical).
The investigators will compute the raw score of items correct and transform to percent correct (range: 0-100%).
Subsequently, the investigators will compute change in outcome in percent difference between before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a far-transfer task (i.e., unrelated to vSTM, showing generalization to other language & cognitive tasks).
|
Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in Subject-Relative, Object-Relative, Active Passive (SOAP): Test of Syntactic Complexity score
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
The SOAP: Test of Syntactic Complexity assesses comprehension abilities given 4 syntactic construction types.
The investigators will compute the raw score of items correct and transform to percent correct (range: 0-100%).
Subsequently, the investigators will compute change in outcome in percent difference between before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a far-transfer task (i.e., unrelated to vSTM, showing generalization to other language & cognitive tasks).
|
Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in Boston Naming Test (Short-Version) score
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
The Boston Naming Test is a widely used picture naming test that detects lexical retrieval deficits in the oral modality.
The investigators will compute the raw score of items correct and transform to percent correct (range: 0-100%), computing change in outcome in percent difference between before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a far-transfer task (i.e., unrelated to vSTM, showing generalization to other language & cognitive tasks).
|
Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in oral naming of action as assessed by Hopkins Assessment of Naming Actions (HANA)
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
The Hopkins Assessment of Naming Actions (HANA) assesses picture naming (specifically verbs) in the oral modality.
The investigators will compute the raw score of items correct and transform to percent correct (range: 0-100%), computing change in outcome in percent difference between before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a far-transfer task (i.e., unrelated to vSTM, showing generalization to other language & cognitive tasks).
|
Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in category fluency score
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
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Category fluency tasks involve generating as many words as possible in one minute for a given semantic category (fruits, animals, vegetables).
Scoring will be based on number of words generated per minute.
The investigators will compute the raw score of items correct and subsequently the percent difference between before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a far-transfer task (i.e., unrelated to vSTM, showing generalization to other language & cognitive tasks).
|
Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in content & efficiency of connected speech
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
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Using picture descriptions (e.g., Cookie Theft image from the Boston Diagnostic Aphasia Examination [BDAE]) and personal/procedural discourse tasks, investigators will obtain representative language samples.
The investigators will compute the raw score of content (content information units [CIUs]) and efficiency (proportion of mazes: false starts, pauses) and transform to percent correct (range: 0-100%), computing change in outcome in percent difference between before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a far-transfer task (i.e., unrelated to vSTM, showing generalization to other language & cognitive tasks).
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Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in N-back (2-back) word score
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
The N-back task is a well-established task that assesses working memory and working memory capacity.
Participants are presented with words in sequence and instructed to reply whether the current word matches the one presented 2 words ago.
Scoring will be based on the total number of correct responses (hit rate) minus the number of incorrect responses (false alarm rate).
The investigators will compute the change in outcome in percent difference between before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a far-transfer task (i.e., unrelated to vSTM, showing generalization to other language & cognitive tasks).
|
Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in digit span backward score
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
The digit span backward is a well-established task that assesses rote immediate verbal memory and working memory.
Participants are presented with a series of digits and are instructed to repeat the digits in the reverse order.
The investigators will compute the raw score of items correctly repeated and compute change in outcome between before intervention and each time point after.
Increase in score is considered a benefit.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 1 and is considered a far-transfer task (i.e., unrelated to vSTM, showing generalization to other language & cognitive tasks).
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Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 1 month post intervention, 3 months post intervention
|
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Change in functional connectivity of select brain regions (z-correlations)
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 3 months post intervention
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Using resting stage functional MRI (rs-fMRI) investigators will detect activity of various brain regions under a resting/task-negative condition, which will help evaluate functional regional interactions as indicated by the z-correlations between the selected brain area.
This outcome measure corresponds to Aim 2.
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Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 3 months post intervention
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Change in Gamma-Aminobutyric Acid (GABA) concentration at stimulated site
Time Frame: Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 3 months post intervention
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Using Magnetic Resonance Spectroscopy (MRS) investigators will measure metabolite (GABA) concentrations from select brain regions in international units (IU).
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Before intervention, immediately after intervention, 3 months post intervention
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Collaborators and Investigators
Sponsor
Collaborators
Investigators
- Principal Investigator: Kyrana Tsapkini, PhD, Johns Hopkins University
Publications and helpful links
General Publications
- Gorno-Tempini ML, Hillis AE, Weintraub S, Kertesz A, Mendez M, Cappa SF, Ogar JM, Rohrer JD, Black S, Boeve BF, Manes F, Dronkers NF, Vandenberghe R, Rascovsky K, Patterson K, Miller BL, Knopman DS, Hodges JR, Mesulam MM, Grossman M. Classification of primary progressive aphasia and its variants. Neurology. 2011 Mar 15;76(11):1006-14. doi: 10.1212/WNL.0b013e31821103e6. Epub 2011 Feb 16.
- Tsapkini K, Frangakis C, Gomez Y, Davis C, Hillis AE. Augmentation of spelling therapy with transcranial direct current stimulation in primary progressive aphasia: Preliminary results and challenges. Aphasiology. 2014;28(8-9):1112-1130. doi: 10.1080/02687038.2014.930410.
- Tsapkini K, Webster KT, Ficek BN, Desmond JE, Onyike CU, Rapp B, Frangakis CE, Hillis AE. Electrical brain stimulation in different variants of primary progressive aphasia: A randomized clinical trial. Alzheimers Dement (N Y). 2018 Sep 5;4:461-472. doi: 10.1016/j.trci.2018.08.002. eCollection 2018.
- Neophytou K, Wiley RW, Rapp B, Tsapkini K. The use of spelling for variant classification in primary progressive aphasia: Theoretical and practical implications. Neuropsychologia. 2019 Oct;133:107157. doi: 10.1016/j.neuropsychologia.2019.107157. Epub 2019 Aug 8.
- Champod AS, Petrides M. Dissociable roles of the posterior parietal and the prefrontal cortex in manipulation and monitoring processes. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A. 2007 Sep 11;104(37):14837-42. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0607101104. Epub 2007 Sep 5.
- Champod AS, Petrides M. Dissociation within the frontoparietal network in verbal working memory: a parametric functional magnetic resonance imaging study. J Neurosci. 2010 Mar 10;30(10):3849-56. doi: 10.1523/JNEUROSCI.0097-10.2010.
- Riello M, Faria AV, Ficek B, Webster K, Onyike CU, Desmond J, Frangakis C, Tsapkini K. The Role of Language Severity and Education in Explaining Performance on Object and Action Naming in Primary Progressive Aphasia. Front Aging Neurosci. 2018 Oct 30;10:346. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2018.00346. eCollection 2018.
- Ficek BN, Wang Z, Zhao Y, Webster KT, Desmond JE, Hillis AE, Frangakis C, Vasconcellos Faria A, Caffo B, Tsapkini K. The effect of tDCS on functional connectivity in primary progressive aphasia. Neuroimage Clin. 2018 May 21;19:703-715. doi: 10.1016/j.nicl.2018.05.023. eCollection 2018. Erratum In: Neuroimage Clin. 2019;22:101734. doi: 10.1016/j.nicl.2019.101734.
Study record dates
Study Major Dates
Study Start (Actual)
Primary Completion (Estimated)
Study Completion (Estimated)
Study Registration Dates
First Submitted
First Submitted That Met QC Criteria
First Posted (Actual)
Study Record Updates
Last Update Posted (Estimated)
Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria
Last Verified
More Information
Terms related to this study
Keywords
Additional Relevant MeSH Terms
- Neurologic Manifestations
- Brain Diseases
- Central Nervous System Diseases
- Nervous System Diseases
- Mental Disorders
- Pathologic Processes
- Neurobehavioral Manifestations
- Neurocognitive Disorders
- Dementia
- Communication Disorders
- Language Disorders
- Aphasia
- Speech Disorders
- Pathological Conditions, Signs and Symptoms
- Signs and Symptoms
- Aphasia, Primary Progressive
- Nerve Degeneration
- Therapeutics
Other Study ID Numbers
- IRB00201027
- R01AG075404 (U.S. NIH Grant/Contract)
Drug and device information, study documents
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated drug product
Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated device product
product manufactured in and exported from the U.S.
This information was retrieved directly from the website clinicaltrials.gov without any changes. If you have any requests to change, remove or update your study details, please contact register@clinicaltrials.gov. As soon as a change is implemented on clinicaltrials.gov, this will be updated automatically on our website as well.
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Johns Hopkins UniversityNational Institute on Aging (NIA)RecruitingPrimary Progressive Aphasia | Logopenic Progressive Aphasia | Non-Fluent Primary Progressive AphasiaUnited States, Canada
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University of Texas at AustinUniversity of California, San Francisco; National Institute on Deafness and...Active, not recruitingPrimary Progressive Aphasia | Aphasia | Semantic Dementia | Logopenic Progressive Aphasia | Semantic Memory Disorder | Nonfluent Aphasia, Progressive | Aphasia, ProgressiveUnited States
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University of Texas at AustinNational Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)Enrolling by invitationPrimary Progressive Aphasia | Aphasia | Semantic Dementia | Logopenic Progressive Aphasia | Semantic Memory Disorder | Nonfluent Aphasia, Progressive | Aphasia, ProgressiveUnited States
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Mayo ClinicNational Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)RecruitingPrimary Progressive Aphasia | Apraxia of Speech | PPA | Non-fluent Aphasia | Primary Progressive Non-fluent AphasiaUnited States
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Massachusetts General HospitalCompletedLogopenic Variant Primary Progressive Aphasia | Non-Fluent Primary Progressive AphasiaUnited States
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Massachusetts General HospitalNational Institute on Deafness and Other Communication Disorders (NIDCD)CompletedLogopenic Variant Primary Progressive Aphasia | Non-fluent Variant Primary Progressive Aphasia | Semantic Variant Primary Progressive AphasiaUnited States
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IRCCS San RaffaeleEnrolling by invitationPrimary Progressive Aphasia(PPA)Italy
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Mayo ClinicCompletedPrimary Progressive Aphasia | Aphasia | Semantic Dementia | Apraxia of Speech | Primary Progressive Nonfluent Aphasia | PPA | Non-fluent Aphasia | Progressive AphasiaUnited States
Clinical Trials on High-definition active tDCS (HD-tDCS) + "Repeat After Me" (RAM) Treatment
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Hôpital le VinatierRecruiting
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Hôpital le VinatierNot yet recruiting
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University of New MexicoUniversity of Miami; The City College of New York; The Mind Research Network; New... and other collaboratorsCompletedMild Traumatic Brain InjuryUnited States
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Monash UniversityZonMw: The Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development; Erasmus...Completed
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University of Sao PauloThomas Jefferson University; The São Paulo Research Foundation (FAPESP); Vias... and other collaboratorsRecruiting
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University of TehranRecruitingHealthy VolunteersIran, Islamic Republic of
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University of Bernki:elementsRecruitingAging | Healthy Volunteer | Depressive Disorder, Major Depressive DisorderSwitzerland
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Kessler FoundationCompletedTraumatic Brain Injury | Upper Extremity DysfunctionUnited States
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Anhui Medical UniversityRecruitingTranscranial Direct Current Stimulation | Non Suicidal Self InjuryChina