An Executive/Monitoring Treatment Protocol on Everyday Life Activities

November 8, 2022 updated by: María Rodríguez Bailón

Training to Deal With Distractors and With Conflicting/Problem-solving Situations: An Executive/Monitoring Treatment Protocol on Everyday Life Activities

Empirical research shows that deficits in executive/monitoring abilities (inhibition, error detection, problem solving) following acquired brain injury produce serious impact on patient's daily life performance. The authors developed an intervention method aimed at improving "on-line" error detection and correction abilities during performance of naturalistic action. Patients will be asked to complete two significant everyday activities (e.g. making a sandwich and setting the kitchen table for four people) while increasing the level of monitoring requirements as their performance improve. Monitoring requirements increased by presenting new semantically and physically related distractors and increasing the number of conflicting/problem solving situations. The treatment involves a metacognitive contextual intervention program based on providing systematic online/offline-feedback on their own performance, with emphasis on making the patient aware of how to deal with distracting/conflicting situations that were previously failed. The authors predict that errors committed and addressed through the feedback sessions (errors, actions towards distractors, failures to detect/solve conflicting situations) will be reduced on post-intervention performance compared to baseline. The authors also expect behavioral improvements to generalize to trained tasks but adding new distractors/conflicting situations or even to untrained tasks.

Study Overview

Detailed Description

This protocol will be applied to several acquired brain damage patients with executive/monitoring deficits. Baseline evaluation will take take around 5 sessions, The training phase will be done on 6 sessions and post-training evaluation will be completed on around 3 sessions. Each patient will be invited to be retested 8/10 weeks after completing the training, to evaluate long term effects (secondary outcome). The final number of participants enrolled in the study will depend on availability.

The authors will use a single case A-B changing criterium design: Phase A constitutes the base line. Three ADL tasks will be performed by the participant without help, two of them will be treated on phase B and the other will not be trained. Each task will be evaluated 3/4 times to obtain a robust baseline. Apart from ADL, other executive/monitoring measures will be obtained pre and post-training through neuropsychological screening.

The level of monitoring difficulty will be increasing from one training session to the next, from level 1 (2 distractors/1 conflicting situation) to level 3 (8 distractors/4 conflicting situations). Baseline and post-training performance will be evaluated at level 3.The criterion to increase the level of monitoring requirements will be adjusted to each individual depending on his/her performance on the previous level. Therefore, only if a given participant reduces on at least 75% the amount of errors from initial evaluation on the present training session he/she will be confronted with the next level of difficulty on the next session. However, if the patient doesn't reach the criterium, the same level of monitoring will be repeated and trained on the following session.

Outcomes measures (post-training phase) will be taken after completing 6 training sessions.

Study Type

Interventional

Enrollment (Actual)

1

Phase

  • Not Applicable

Contacts and Locations

This section provides the contact details for those conducting the study, and information on where this study is being conducted.

Study Locations

      • Granada, Spain, 18011
        • Centro de Investigación Mente, Cerebro y Comportamiento (CIMCYC)
      • Granada, Spain, 18013
        • Hospital Universitario Virgen de las Nieves. Departamento de Medicina Física y Rehabilitación.
    • España
      • Málaga, España, Spain, 29620
        • Hospital Universitario Marítimo Virgen de la Victoria (Torremolinos)

Participation Criteria

Researchers look for people who fit a certain description, called eligibility criteria. Some examples of these criteria are a person's general health condition or prior treatments.

Eligibility Criteria

Ages Eligible for Study

18 years to 70 years (ADULT, OLDER_ADULT)

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

No

Genders Eligible for Study

All

Description

Inclusion Criteria:

  • Presence of a chronic DCA (more than 3 months),
  • Presence of cognitive deficits relative to executive/monitoring functions and/or memory evaluated by the team of professionals
  • Age ≥ 18 years

Exclusion Criteria:

  • Visuoperceptual deficits
  • Attentional neglect
  • Severe motor or perceptual alterations that impede the realization of activities of daily life
  • Alterations of verbal comprehension
  • Severe memory disturbances

Study Plan

This section provides details of the study plan, including how the study is designed and what the study is measuring.

How is the study designed?

Design Details

  • Primary Purpose: TREATMENT
  • Allocation: NA
  • Interventional Model: SINGLE_GROUP
  • Masking: NONE

Arms and Interventions

Participant Group / Arm
Intervention / Treatment
EXPERIMENTAL: executive/monitoring training
All participants will be part of the same group and their performance after treatment will be compared to their own performance prior to treatment (baseline)
The treatment phase have 3 timepoints, 1 the patient is asked to perform an ADL alone, 2. Video feedback is administrated. This requires the participant to watch its own videotaped performance with the therapist while the therapist encourage the participant to identify errors, areas of strength, and to suggest strategies to solve errors in future sessions. 3. feedback online will be provided by the therapist on participant performance. The therapist will wait for the patient to detect and correct their error spontaneously. If the patient does not detect it, the therapist provides unspecified/specific help. This strategy is based on previous work (Schmidt, et al 2013, Ownstorth et al. 2010). The novelty of our procedure is the inclusion of distracting and conflicting/problem solving situations to be inhibited, detected and solved. Feedback will focus on these situations. The level of monitoring requirements will be adjusted to participants performance using a changing criterion design.
Other Names:
  • Metacognitive Training

What is the study measuring?

Primary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Number of errors on trained ADL tasks at post-training phase compared to baseline phase.
Time Frame: 30-45 minutes
Target errors will be coded based on the criteria developed by Humphreys and Forde (2002). Distractor errors will be considered whenever an action is directed to a non-target object. Finally, conflicting errors will be considered whenever a conflicting situation is not detected and/or solved correctly. The authors expect to find a significant reduction on the number of errors of every category (target errors, distractor errors and conflicting errors) committed on post-training performance of trained tasks compared to baseline measures of these tasks.
30-45 minutes
Rate of old/new errors on trained ADL tasks at post-training phase.
Time Frame: 30-45 minutes
The authors will codify errors as old/new, depending on whether they were already asdressed or not during the training sessions. The authors expect a reduced rate of old compared to new ones at the post-training phase.
30-45 minutes
Number of errors (target errors, distractor errors, conflicting errors) on trained ADL tasks with novel executive/monitoring requirements
Time Frame: 30-45 minutes
The authors expect to find a significant reduction on the number of errors of every type (target, distractor and conflicting errors) committed at post-training performance compared to baseline even when presenting new distractors and conflicting situations that were never encountered during the training sessions. This outcome will constitute a test of near transfer.
30-45 minutes
Number of errors (target errors, distractor errors, conflicting errors) on the untrained ADL task at post-training phase compared to baseline phase
Time Frame: 20 minutes
The authors expect to find a significant reduction on the number of errors o every type committed at post-training performance compared to performance at baseline, even in a task that was not trained. This outcome will constitute a test of far transfer
20 minutes
INECO Frontal Screening
Time Frame: 6-10 minutes
Executive functions. This screening test was designed to provide health professionals with a sensitive and specific executive screening test to determine frontal dysfunction. The authors expect to find a better performance in this test at the post-training phase compared to the baseline phase. This outcome will constitute a test of far transfer.
6-10 minutes
WCPA The Weekly Calendar Planning Activity
Time Frame: 15-20 minutes
This test includes the scheduling of meetings as part of a weekly planning, in total there are 10 appointments. The test provides a total error score and the ability to use problem-solving strategies.The authors expect to find a better performance in this test at the post-training phase compared to the baseline phase. This outcome will constitute a test of far transfer.
15-20 minutes
WCST Wisconsin Card Sorting Test
Time Frame: 10-15 min
Evaluates the capacity of abstraction, formation of concepts and the change of cognitive strategies in response to changes that occur in environmental contingencies.The authors expect to find a better performance in this test at the post-training phase compared to the baseline phase. This outcome will constitute a test of far transfer.
10-15 min

Secondary Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Measure of anticipatory awareness about own ADL performance
Time Frame: 3 minutes.
Before performing every ADL task , the researcher will ask participants to evaluate how well they think they will perform (i.e. to predict the number of errors). This estimation will be compared with actual performance (number of errors committed). The difference between these two measures will constitute a measure of anticipatory awareness discrepancy, that could be positive (overestimation) or negative (underestimation). The authors expect that discrepancy in anticipatory awareness will be reduced after training compared to measures at baseline.
3 minutes.
Measure of self awareness about own ADL performance
Time Frame: 3 minutes.
After completing every ADL patients will be asked which errors they think they have committed. This estimation will be compared with actual performance (actual number of errors committed). The difference between these two measures will constitute a measure of self awareness discrepancy on their ADL performance. The Authors expect that discrepancies between patients evaluations and their actual performance will be reduced after training.
3 minutes.
Measure of general metacognitive knowledge measured with the "Patient Competency Rating Scale" (PCRS, Prigatano, 1980).
Time Frame: 15 minutes.
The PCRS is a 30-item self-report instrument which asks the subject to use a 5-point Likert scale to rate his or her degree of difficulty in a variety of tasks and functions. The subject's responses are compared to those of a significant other (a relative or therapist) who rates the subject on the identical items. Impaired self-awareness is inferred from discrepancies between the two ratings, such that the subject overestimates/underestimates his/ her abilities compared to the other informant. It includes items about competency in activities of daily living, behavioral and emotional function, cognitive abilities, and physical function.functional and cognitive competency. The authors expect that discrepancies between the patient and the caregiver will be reduced after training compared to these measures at baseline.
15 minutes.
Follow-up of the same measures described above, taken 8/10 weeks after the end of the treatment.
Time Frame: 100 minutes
The authors are interested at measuring potential long-term benefits of our intervention. To do so the authors will invite participants to be re-evaluated with most of the tests described above used at the immediate post-training phase. The authors expect to find that most improvements already present at the immediate post-training phase are still present at this follow-up time point.
100 minutes
Caregiver daily registration of instrumental ADL performed by the patient during the Follow-up period (during the 8/10 weeks after the end of the treatment).
Time Frame: 150 minutes
The authors will include a short questionnaire for direct caregivers where they will provide information about the number of ADL performed by the patient everyday. during this time period. This information will be analyzed as a potential mediator of follow-up outcomes.
150 minutes

Other Outcome Measures

Outcome Measure
Measure Description
Time Frame
Measures of emotional distress at post-training compared to these measures at baseline with the The Depression Anxiety Stress Scale (DASS-21, Lovibond & Lovibond, 1995)
Time Frame: 20 minutes
The DASS-21, is a well-established instrument to measure symptoms of depression, anxiety and stress in both clinical and non-clinical samples of adults. It includes a total of 21 items, 7 items per subscale: depression, anxiety and stress. Patients are asked to score every item on a scale from 0 (did not apply to me at all) to 3 (applied to me very much). Sum scores are computed by adding up the scores on the items per (sub)scale and multiplying them by a factor 2. Sum scores for the total DASS-total scale thus range between 0 and 120, and those for each of the subscales may range between 0 and 42. Cut-off scores of 60 and 21 are used for the total DASS score and for the depression subscale respectively. The scale will be administrated to patients pre and post intervention in order to asses changes in emotional distress due to training. Based on previous research using similar feedback training methodology with ADL no changes are expected.
20 minutes

Collaborators and Investigators

This is where you will find people and organizations involved with this study.

Collaborators

Investigators

  • Principal Investigator: María Jesús Funes- Molina, Professor, University of Granada. Departamento de Psicología Experimental)

Study record dates

These dates track the progress of study record and summary results submissions to ClinicalTrials.gov. Study records and reported results are reviewed by the National Library of Medicine (NLM) to make sure they meet specific quality control standards before being posted on the public website.

Study Major Dates

Study Start (ACTUAL)

November 29, 2018

Primary Completion (ACTUAL)

October 30, 2020

Study Completion (ACTUAL)

June 28, 2021

Study Registration Dates

First Submitted

May 10, 2019

First Submitted That Met QC Criteria

May 18, 2019

First Posted (ACTUAL)

May 22, 2019

Study Record Updates

Last Update Posted (ACTUAL)

November 9, 2022

Last Update Submitted That Met QC Criteria

November 8, 2022

Last Verified

November 1, 2022

More Information

Terms related to this study

Drug and device information, study documents

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated drug product

No

Studies a U.S. FDA-regulated device product

No

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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