Open access · US-GOV
via ClinicalTrials.gov Clinical trial
Individualized-Targeted Cognitive Training in Older Adults With HAND
Authors not listed
University of Alabama at Birmingham · 2017
Abstract
Over 50% of adults with HIV have some form of HIV-Associated Neurocognitive Disorder (HAND) which represents a significant symptom that interferes with everyday functioning and quality of life. As adults age with HIV, they are more likely to develop comorbidities such as cardiovascular disease, hypertension, and insulin resistance which will further contribute to poorer cognitive functioning and HAND. Based upon the Frascati criteria, HAND is diagnosed when a person performs less than 1 to 2 SD below their normative mean (education \& age) on measures of two or more cognitive domains (e.g., attention, speed of processing, verbal memory, executive functioning). Yet, from the cognitive literature and prior studies, administering certain computerized cognitive training programs may improve specific cognitive domains in older adults and those with HIV. Such cognitive training programs may be effective in older adults with HIV and therefore investigators may be able to change the diagnosis of HAND in such cognitively vulnerable adults. In this pre-post experimental study, 146 older adults (50+) with HAND will be randomized to be in either: 1) the Individualied-Targeted Cognitive Training, or 2) a no-contact control group. The investigators will focus on those cognitive domains in which participants express an impairment and train them with the corresponding cognitive program. Such an Individualized-Targeted Cognitive Training approach using standard cognitive training programs may offer hope and symptom relief to those individuals diagnosed with HAND. Furthermore, these changes may result in improved everyday functioning (e.g., IADLs) and quality of life. This approach represents a paradigm shift in possibly changing the way HAND is examined. Specific Aim 1: Compare adults who do receive Individualized-Targeted Cognitive Training to those who do not in order to determine whether a change in HAND prevalence and severity occurs between groups. Exploratory Aim 1: Compare adults who do receive individualized-targeted cognitive training to those who do not in order to determine whether this improves everyday functioning (e.g., IADLs). Exploratory Aim 2: Determine whether improvements in HAND and/or everyday functioning over time mediate improvements in quality of life.
◌ CITATION ONLY
Full text is not openly licensed for redistribution here. Read it at the source:
Provenance
- Source
- ClinicalTrials.gov
- Canonical
- link ↗
- Fetched
- 2026-05-29 MST
Cite this
APA
Anonymous. (2017). Individualized-Targeted Cognitive Training in Older Adults With HAND. <em>University of Alabama at Birmingham</em>. https://clinicaltrials.gov/study/NCT03122288
Vancouver
Anonymous. Individualized-Targeted Cognitive Training in Older Adults With HAND. University of Alabama at Birmingham. 2017.
BibTeX
@misc{anon2017Indivi,
title = {Individualized-Targeted Cognitive Training in Older Adults With HAND},
author = {Anonymous},
journal = {University of Alabama at Birmingham},
year = {2017},
}
Research neighborhood
References, citing works, and semantically nearest findings. Click a node to open it.
Related findings
University of Florida 2024
Open access · US-GOV
Neuromodulation Effects in Older Adults
University Medicine Greifswald 2018
Open access · US-GOV
tDCS-accompanied Cognitive Training Effects in Healthy Older Adults - Randomised, Sham Controlled, Interventional Study
University of South Florida 2015
Open access · US-GOV
The Impact of Piano Training on Cognitive Performance and Psychosocial Well-Being in Older Adults
University of Bern 2025
Open access · US-GOV
Exploring the Role of the Prefrontal Cortex in Decision-Making
VA Office of Research and Development 2017
Open access · US-GOV
Improving Psychosocial Functioning in Older Veterans With PTSD
University Health Network, Toronto 2018
Open access · US-GOV