Computerized Cognitive Training in Breast Cancer Survivors

NCT05570604 · Status: COMPLETED · Phase: NA · Type: INTERVENTIONAL · Enrollment: 46

Last updated 2025-04-24

Study results available
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Summary

For millions of cancer survivors, cognitive impairment is a prevalent, severe, and persistent problem that is associated with other symptoms (depressive symptoms, anxiety and fatigue), poorer work ability, and poorer quality of life. Available evidence, including work by the investigators own group, suggests that cognitive training may be a viable treatment option. However, to date, these studies are limited as none have been conducted in the home and therefore fail to address the transferability of these empirically based cognitive training programs to general practice.

The purpose of this translational research is to conduct a home based single-blind, randomized controlled trial to test the feasibility, satisfaction, and preliminary efficacy of cognitive training compared to attention control in breast cancer survivors (BCS) as well as to explore potential biomarkers of intervention effects.

This research innovatively builds on investigator's previous research by: 1) translating findings from the laboratory to the home setting and importantly seeks to identify facilitators and barriers of intervention use; 2) addresses limitations of previous trials (uses an attention control rather than a no-contact or wait-list control), (3) examines cognitive training effects on real-life outcomes such as associated symptoms, perceived work ability and quality of life; and (4) will be the first study in cancer survivors to explore levels of BDNF as a potentially sensitive outcome measure of intervention effects over time compared to attention control. Findings from this study will provide necessary information about the feasibility, satisfaction and preliminary efficacy of the home-based cognitive training on memory performance and processing speed as well as its effects on associated outcomes in BCS. Positive results will lead to a larger, full-scale study to determine efficacy and build evidence-based treatment for clinicians to use in treating BCS with cognitive impairment.

Conditions

Interventions

BEHAVIORAL

Sweep Seeker

The person is asked to clear the rows of blocks presented on the screen, either by moving them into horizontal or vertical blocks that have identical color. The goal is to refine and increase the response of primary visual cortex neurons and to enable the person to increase speed and accuracy of visual processing (executive function) and visual memory.

BEHAVIORAL

Bird Safari

The user is first presented with a target bird. Subsequently, a group of birds is presented in the peripheral vision and then disappears when the trial begins. The user selects the section of the screen where the target bird appeared. The presentation speed adapts with user performance (i.e. better performance = faster presentation). The goal is to improve speed and accuracy of object identification in peripheral vision and improve visual precision important for improving memory.

BEHAVIORAL

Jewel Diver

The person is first presented objects (jewels) on the screen. The objects are then covered with occluders (bubbles) and then identical distracters are presented. The objects move around in screen and when the movement stops, the user chooses the occluders that cover the jewels. The number of jewels adapts to performance (more jewels = better performance). The goal is to improve divided visual attention, sustained visual attention, visual working memory, and visual precision.

BEHAVIORAL

Master Gardener

The person is presented a series of target stimuli and distracters which are presented at one time and then disappear. The locations of the stimuli are marked by icons, and the user chooses the icons where the target stimuli were once located. The goal is to increase speed and accuracy as well as the ability to extract information accurately.

BEHAVIORAL

Road Tour

The person is presented with a target vehicle briefly in both the center of the screen and in one of eight locations in the periphery. Two vehicles are then presented briefly in the center of the screen, one of which is the target vehicle. The user must identify the location of the target vehicle in the periphery as well as identify which was the target vehicle that appeared in the center. The goal of this activity is to improve divided attention and ability to extract information and discard irrelevant information from peripheral vision.

BEHAVIORAL

Computerized Crossword Puzzles

The program offers a pre-determined set of computerized crossword puzzles. The site has over 100,000 puzzles and can be accessed easily via the web and are free to users. The computerized crossword puzzles do not provide for progressive challenges of increasing speed, visual field size, number of distractors or degree of difficulty of targeted stimulus differentiation.

Sponsors & Collaborators

  • Indiana University

    collaborator OTHER
  • Ohio State University

    lead OTHER

Principal Investigators

  • Diane Von Ah, PhD · Ohio State University College of Nursing.

  • Tina Opoku, BS · Ohio State University College of Nursing

Study Design

Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
SINGLE
Model
PARALLEL

Eligibility

Min Age
21 Years
Sex
FEMALE
Healthy Volunteers
No

Timeline & Regulatory

Start
2017-05-17
Primary Completion
2020-03-20
Completion
2020-03-20

Countries

  • United States

Study Locations

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Entities

Read the full study record

This page highlights key information. For complete eligibility criteria, study locations, investigator contacts, and the full protocol, visit the original record on ClinicalTrials.gov.

View NCT05570604 on ClinicalTrials.gov