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. 2022 Dec:82:101777.
doi: 10.1016/j.arr.2022.101777. Epub 2022 Nov 4.

Randomised controlled trials for the prevention of cognitive decline or dementia: A systematic review

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Free article

Randomised controlled trials for the prevention of cognitive decline or dementia: A systematic review

Nicola Coley et al. Ageing Res Rev. 2022 Dec.
Free article

Abstract

Dementia prevention research has progressed rapidly in recent years, with publication of several large lifestyle intervention trials, and renewed interest in pharmacological interventions, notably for individuals with Alzheimer's disease biomarkers, warranting an updated review of results and methodology. We identified 112 completed trials testing the efficacy of single-domain pharmacological (n = 33, 29%), nutritional (n = 27, 24%), physical activity (n = 18, 16%) and cognitive stimulation (n = 13, 12%), or multidomain (n = 22, 20%) interventions on incident dementia, or a relevant intermediate marker (e.g. cognitive function, biomarkers or dementia risk scores) in people without dementia. The earliest trials tested pharmacological interventions or nutritional supplements, but lifestyle interventions predominated in the last decade. In total, 21 (19%) trials demonstrated a clear beneficial effect on the pre-specified primary outcome (or all co-primary outcomes), but only two (10%) were large-scale (testing blood pressure lowering (Syst-Eur) or multidomain (FINGER) interventions on incident dementia and cognitive change in cognitive function, respectively). Of the 116 ongoing trials, 40% (n = 46) are testing multidomain interventions. Recent methodological shifts concern target populations, primary outcome measures, and intervention design, but study design remains constant (parallel group randomised controlled trial). Future trials may consider using adaptive trials or interventions, and more targeted approaches, since certain interventions may be more effective in certain subgroups of the population, and at specific times in the life-course. Efforts should also be made to increase the representativeness and diversity of prevention trial populations.

Keywords: Alzheimer’s disease; Clinical trial methodology; Cognitive decline; Dementia; Prevention; Randomized controlled trials.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interests NC reports research funding from the European Commission. PSA reports research agreements with Janssen, Lilly and Eisai; grants from NIA, the Alzheimer’s Association, and FNIH and consulting fees from Biogen, Roche, Merck, Abbvie, Immunobrain Checkpoint, Rainbow Medical, and Shionogi. BV reports grants from Lilly, Merck, Roche, Lundbeck, Biogen, grants from Alzheimer’s Association, European Commission, personal fees from Roche, Eisai. SA reports grants from EU programs, Fondation de l’Avenir, and the AMPA and France Alzheimer Associations; personal fees from Nestlé , Nestec SA, Sanofi, Roche, Biogen, and MSD; and non-financial support from Pfizer, and Icon. CG reports no competing interests.

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