Nicole D. Anderson, D. D’Amico, S. Rotenberg, D. R. Addis, J. Gillen, D. Moore, J. A. Furlano, B. Tan, M. Binns, M. Santarossa, H. Chertkow
{"title":"Validation of a Community-Based Approach Toward Personalized Dementia Risk Reduction: The Kimel Family Centre for Brain Health and Wellness","authors":"Nicole D. Anderson, D. D’Amico, S. Rotenberg, D. R. Addis, J. Gillen, D. Moore, J. A. Furlano, B. Tan, M. Binns, M. Santarossa, H. Chertkow","doi":"10.14283/jpad.2024.98","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"<h3 data-test=\"abstract-sub-heading\">Background/Objectives</h3><p>The Kimel Family Centre for Brain Health and Wellness is a research-driven community centre testing the efficacy of personalized dementia risk reduction programming on dementia risk and cognition. The objective of this protocol is to validate this approach by following people for two years.</p><h3 data-test=\"abstract-sub-heading\">Design/Setting</h3><p>Participants will receive a comprehensive dementia risk assessment, including nonmodifiable and modifiable risk factors, from which they will receive a Personalized Dementia Risk Report and Program Strategy, indicating their health conditions increasing and their risk level in five modifiable risk domains: physical activity, brain-healthy eating, cognitive engagement, social connections, and mental wellbeing. Equipped with this information, participants will enroll in programs within the Centre to address their risk factors. Changes to their dementia risk, cognition, and Personalized Program Strategy will be communicated through re-assessments of risk factors every six months (risk and cognition) and every year (comprehensive assessment).</p><h3 data-test=\"abstract-sub-heading\">Participants</h3><p>Participants (n = 450) will be 50 years of age or older, without a diagnosis of dementia, and sufficiently fluent in English to complete the assessments and understand program instructors. One goal is that our participant sample will include people of low income (with fundraising providing free community centre membership), and from various ethnoracial backgrounds.</p><h3 data-test=\"abstract-sub-heading\">Intervention</h3><p>Participants will select programs to meet their Personalized Program Strategy. For physical activity, they will gradually work toward the Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology guidelines. For brain-healthy eating, they will learn about the Brain Health Food Guide and food label reading, and then take additional programs. For cognitive engagement and mental wellbeing, they will take at least one hour of relevant programming per week. Social connections will be reinforced throughout all programs. All participants will also have access to the Canadian Consortium on Neurodegeneration’s CAN-THUMBS Up online, educational program on modifiable dementia risk factors, called Brain Health PRO.</p><h3 data-test=\"abstract-sub-heading\">Measurements</h3><p>The comprehensive assessment includes numerous dementia risk factors, but the primary measures are risk in the five domains, health conditions proximal to those five risk domains, and cognition, and how these are affected by adherence and quality of goal-directed future simulation. We hypothesize a reduced risk in the five domains within six months, improvements in health biomarkers within a year, and maintenance of cognition within two years, with these benefits accruing with greater adherence, but only up to a point, at which benefits will plateau, and greater benefits among participants whose goal-directed simulations are more vivid, personally-relevant, achievable, and positive.</p><h3 data-test=\"abstract-sub-heading\">Conclusions</h3><p>This innovative approach overcomes a number of limitations present in prior multidomain dementia prevention trials. Adapting a preference clinical trial that is embedded in a community centre, where participants have autonomy to choose programs to address their modifiable dementia risk factors, has real-world applicability in the global effort to reduce dementia risk.</p>","PeriodicalId":22711,"journal":{"name":"The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer's Disease","volume":"19 1","pages":""},"PeriodicalIF":4.3000,"publicationDate":"2024-05-28","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer's Disease","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.14283/jpad.2024.98","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q2","JCRName":"BUSINESS","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background/Objectives
The Kimel Family Centre for Brain Health and Wellness is a research-driven community centre testing the efficacy of personalized dementia risk reduction programming on dementia risk and cognition. The objective of this protocol is to validate this approach by following people for two years.
Design/Setting
Participants will receive a comprehensive dementia risk assessment, including nonmodifiable and modifiable risk factors, from which they will receive a Personalized Dementia Risk Report and Program Strategy, indicating their health conditions increasing and their risk level in five modifiable risk domains: physical activity, brain-healthy eating, cognitive engagement, social connections, and mental wellbeing. Equipped with this information, participants will enroll in programs within the Centre to address their risk factors. Changes to their dementia risk, cognition, and Personalized Program Strategy will be communicated through re-assessments of risk factors every six months (risk and cognition) and every year (comprehensive assessment).
Participants
Participants (n = 450) will be 50 years of age or older, without a diagnosis of dementia, and sufficiently fluent in English to complete the assessments and understand program instructors. One goal is that our participant sample will include people of low income (with fundraising providing free community centre membership), and from various ethnoracial backgrounds.
Intervention
Participants will select programs to meet their Personalized Program Strategy. For physical activity, they will gradually work toward the Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology guidelines. For brain-healthy eating, they will learn about the Brain Health Food Guide and food label reading, and then take additional programs. For cognitive engagement and mental wellbeing, they will take at least one hour of relevant programming per week. Social connections will be reinforced throughout all programs. All participants will also have access to the Canadian Consortium on Neurodegeneration’s CAN-THUMBS Up online, educational program on modifiable dementia risk factors, called Brain Health PRO.
Measurements
The comprehensive assessment includes numerous dementia risk factors, but the primary measures are risk in the five domains, health conditions proximal to those five risk domains, and cognition, and how these are affected by adherence and quality of goal-directed future simulation. We hypothesize a reduced risk in the five domains within six months, improvements in health biomarkers within a year, and maintenance of cognition within two years, with these benefits accruing with greater adherence, but only up to a point, at which benefits will plateau, and greater benefits among participants whose goal-directed simulations are more vivid, personally-relevant, achievable, and positive.
Conclusions
This innovative approach overcomes a number of limitations present in prior multidomain dementia prevention trials. Adapting a preference clinical trial that is embedded in a community centre, where participants have autonomy to choose programs to address their modifiable dementia risk factors, has real-world applicability in the global effort to reduce dementia risk.
背景/目标基梅尔家庭脑健康与保健中心是一家以研究为导向的社区中心,该中心正在测试个性化痴呆症风险降低方案对痴呆症风险和认知能力的疗效。设计/设置参与者将接受全面的痴呆症风险评估,包括不可改变和可改变的风险因素,然后他们将收到一份《个性化痴呆症风险报告和计划策略》,说明他们的健康状况以及他们在五个可改变风险领域的风险水平:体育锻炼、健脑饮食、认知参与、社会联系和心理健康。掌握了这些信息后,参与者将报名参加中心内的计划,以应对他们的风险因素。参与者参与者(n=450)年龄在 50 岁或以上,没有痴呆症诊断,英语流利,能够完成评估并理解项目指导人员。我们的目标之一是,参与者样本将包括低收入人群(通过筹款提供免费社区中心会员资格)和来自不同种族背景的人群。在体育锻炼方面,他们将逐步达到加拿大运动生理学会(Canadian Society for Exercise Physiology)的指导标准。在健脑饮食方面,他们将学习《健脑食品指南》和食品标签阅读,然后参加其他项目。在认知参与和精神健康方面,他们每周至少要参加一小时的相关课程。在所有课程中都将加强社交联系。所有参与者还将可以访问加拿大神经变性联盟的 CAN-THUMBS Up 在线教育项目,了解可改变的痴呆症风险因素,该项目名为脑健康 PRO。综合评估包括众多痴呆症风险因素,但主要测量的是五个领域的风险、与这五个风险领域接近的健康状况和认知能力,以及这些因素如何受到目标导向未来模拟的坚持性和质量的影响。我们假设在六个月内五个领域的风险会降低,一年内健康生物标志物会改善,两年内认知能力会保持不变,这些益处会随着坚持率的提高而增加,但只到一定程度,益处就会趋于平稳,而目标导向模拟更生动、更贴近个人、更可实现、更积极的参与者的益处会更大。将偏好性临床试验嵌入社区中心,让参与者自主选择项目来解决其可改变的痴呆症风险因素,在全球降低痴呆症风险的努力中具有现实适用性。
期刊介绍:
The JPAD Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer’Disease will publish reviews, original research articles and short reports to improve our knowledge in the field of Alzheimer prevention including: neurosciences, biomarkers, imaging, epidemiology, public health, physical cognitive exercise, nutrition, risk and protective factors, drug development, trials design, and heath economic outcomes.JPAD will publish also the meeting abstracts from Clinical Trial on Alzheimer Disease (CTAD) and will be distributed both in paper and online version worldwide.We hope that JPAD with your contribution will play a role in the development of Alzheimer prevention.